https://foreignpolicy.com/2015/07/06/be-bold-frau-merkel-germany-greece/

ARGUMENT
Be Bold, Frau Merkel
The Greek people have spoken. Now it’s time for Germany and other creditors
to summon some political courage, and extend the debt-relief they
desperately need.

BY PHILIPPE LEGRAIN
JULY 6, 2015

[Philippe Legrain, who was economic advisor to the president of the
European Commission from 2011 to 2014, is a visiting senior fellow at the
London School of Economics’ European Institute and the author of European
Spring: Why Our Economies and Politics Are in a Mess — and How to Put Them
Right.]

The Greek people have spoken, delivering a defiant oxi (no) to their
creditors’ terms. Blackmailed with the threat of being forced out of the
eurozone and under siege in an economy starved of cash by the political
European Central Bank, Greeks resoundingly rejected — by 61.3 percent to
38.7 percent — the prospect of being a permanently depressed colony bled
dry by their incompetent creditors. Now what?

Most spreadsheet shifters and politicians on the creditor side want to
persist with the logic of confrontation. To quote Oscar Wilde, they know
“the price of everything and the value of nothing.” But even in narrow
accounting terms, their strategy is flawed: Contrary to their expectations,
Greeks have not surrendered, and pushing them out of the eurozone would be
more costly to the creditors than clinching a deal. Besides, the stakes are
much bigger than that. Does the eurozone really want to be an empire that
tramples on democracy and crushes dissent? Is fear enough to hold it
together, or might disintegration have a domino effect? What about the cost
of neglecting all the other big issues that Europe’s leaders ought to be
addressing? For everyone’s sake, it is time to break free of the narrow,
destructive logic of creditor nationalism and draw a line under the Greek
crisis.For everyone’s sake, it is time to break free of the narrow,
destructive logic of creditor nationalism and draw a line under the Greek
crisis.

The creditors pretend their small-mindedness is a point of principle:
Everyone has to obey eurozone rules, and these stipulate that governments
must pay their debts. Except they don’t stipulate that. Nowhere in the
Maastricht Treaty that created the euro does it state that governments have
to pay their debts in full. How could it? Sometimes they can’t. But instead
of creating a mechanism for restructuring the debts of an insolvent
sovereign, the treaty drafters left a blank in the hope that such a
situation would never arise. They did stipulate, though, that governments
should not bail out their peers.

When Greece became insolvent in 2010, its debts ought to have been
restructured, as independent analysts and International Monetary Fund
experts advised. Instead, eurozone governments made a catastrophic policy
choice. Insisting that debts were sacrosanct and the stability of the
entire eurozone was at stake, they decided to breach the no-bailout rule
and lend European taxpayers’ money to Greece. As Karl Otto Pöhl, the former
president of the Bundesbank, put it: “It was about protecting German banks,
but especially the French banks, from debt write-offs.… Now we have this
mess.”

Critics contend that this is ancient history, but it isn’t. That tragic
decision and subsequent mistakes have transformed the political economy of
the eurozone. Initially a voluntary union of equal member states, it has
become a hierarchical relationship in which eurozone institutions have
become instruments for creditors to impose their will on debtors. The
bailout of Greece’s private creditors has also set Europeans against each
other: Germans, Spaniards, Slovaks, and others now have an interest in
resisting the debt relief that Greece needs to recover. To find an amicable
solution to the Greek crisis, the eurozone needs to escape from this
destructive logic.

Emmanuel Macron, the current wunderkind of French politics, is one of the
few front-line politicians perceptive and brave enough to say this
publicly. “Let’s not re-enact the Treaty of Versailles,” France’s economy
minister said the day of the Greek vote. The imposition of iniquitous terms
on a defeated Germany after World War I bled the country dry. Germany’s war
reparations were repeatedly written down, but not before Adolf Hitler took
power and repudiated them. After World War II, the country’s international
creditors, led by the United States and including a liberated Greece, had
the wisdom and magnanimity to halve post-Nazi (West) Germany’s debts in
1953, laying the foundations for its postwar economic “miracle.” The United
States also provided Marshall Plan aid to rekindle investment and growth.

That breadth of vision — enlightened, long-term self-interest — is what is
needed now. It also requires leadership, a quality in short supply these
days, and political capital, of which Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel,
has plenty.

The starting point is to be honest with voters. Merkel and others need to
explain that Greece cannot pay its debts in full. So the choice is not
whether Greece’s debts are written down, but how.Merkel and others need to
explain that Greece cannot pay its debts in full. So the choice is not
whether Greece’s debts are written down, but how. They could be
restructured in an orderly fashion in which creditors get some of their
money back. Or they will be defaulted on in a chaotic fashion in which some
creditors may get nothing back. If that forced Greece out of the eurozone,
the country would also default on its Target2 liabilities to the European
Central Bank (ECB). The total bill: 350 billion euros or more.

The IMF’s belated admission last week that Greece’s debts are unsustainable
— albeit without conceding that the IMF’s previous assessment in 2012 was
disingenuous — could make this easier. Berlin could simply accept the IMF’s
conclusions as those of an expert authority. Once the principle of debt
relief is accepted, as the French government has already suggested,
proceeding in an orderly fashion imposes itself.

The second point is to highlight the broader costs of Grexit to Europe.
Those who think Greece’s departure would strengthen the eurozone are
deluded. There is no political appetite for strengthening its institutional
framework; even the supposedly farsighted report by its “five presidents”
set its sights low. And even if eurozone leaders were committed to such
changes, the peoples of Europe are not. Only small steps can be achieved
without changing the EU treaty — and big steps requiring treaty change
would doubtless be rejected in France and the Netherlands, as in 2005, and
indeed elsewhere too.

On the contrary, a Grexit would have incalculable costs. EU integration’s
great strength is its sense of permanence and inevitability. It began as a
transformative project, and to stand aside was to risk isolation against
the march of history. Yet Europe is now fragmenting, and the departure of
even small, rebellious Greece would not just be a dismal failure; it could
also trigger further unraveling.

Although the immediate financial fallout would doubtless eventually be
contained by ECB intervention, a demonstration that monetary union is not
irrevocable would make it permanently more fragile. That would have an
enduring economic price: an additional risk premium on investing in the
continent’s vulnerable economies, thereby entrenching their position on the
eurozone’s “periphery” — the opposite of the economic convergence that the
monetary union is meant to stimulate.

Perhaps more significant would be the political contagion. The brutal
ejection of Greece would solidify the disenchantment with Europe felt by
many on the left and buttress the anti-euro right too. It would also
bolster their conviction that exit is possible. If Greece did better than
expected outside the euro — which wouldn’t be difficult, given the belief
that it would end up a failed state — it could have a domino effect. There
is also geopolitics. Greece is situated between an unstable Balkans and an
aggressive Russia, and it is an entry point for unwanted migrants and
potentially Islamic State terrorists too, as American policymakers keep
reminding Berlin.

The third point is that the eurozone needs to proceed with the consent of
all its members — including Greece. As Macron said, “It would be a historic
mistake to crush the Greek people.” When Greek Prime Minister Alexis
Tsipras says that the eurozone must respect (Greek) democracy, his eurozone
counterparts respond that Greece must also respect their democracies. That
debt relief would impose losses on European taxpayers is deeply regrettable
and unfair. But their democratic wishes were violated by their own leaders,
and those losses imposed, back in 2010. Those losses are sunk: Debt relief
merely makes this transparent to voters — hence why Merkel is so desperate
to avoid it.

One solution, therefore, is to use opacity as cover for compromise:
maintaining the pretense that Greece will pay its debts to eurozone
governments in full while extending the maturities of the loans and
trimming their interest rates. Pushed to its logical conclusion, a
zero-coupon perpetuity — a bond that pays no interest and is never redeemed
— would write off all Greece’s debt! But that would still leave the debts
to the IMF and the bonds illegally purchased by the ECB as part of its
Securities Markets Programme, which have higher interest rates and come due
over the next few years. So some kind of debt swap, as proposed by the
Greek government, is needed.

The final issue is what conditions the creditors should demand for debt
relief. The official line is that relief is unthinkable unless Greece
commits to “reform,” as defined by the creditors: mostly tax hikes and
spending cuts, rather than genuine growth-enhancing measures. The
creditors’ priority has been getting their money back or at least being
seen to act tough, rather than boosting Greece’s long-term prospects. But
that isn’t just undemocratic; it’s damaging for Greece. If Athens needs
outside advice, it would be better served by more disinterested experts
such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and the
World Bank.

The permanent combat — sorry, negotiations and monitoring — between Greece
and its creditors is politically draining. It’s in everyone’s interests to
draw a line under the crisis. The creditors should propose debt relief
sufficient for Greece to regain market access, provide no further funding,
and demand no new conditions. Greeks could thus regain control over their
destiny and hold the Syriza government accountable for its decisions at the
next election. European leaders would have more time to devote to other
pressing matters, not least how to address the economic stagnation and
political disenchantment in their own countries, as well as issues such as
Ukraine, the Middle East, and migration.

Overcoming the logic of confrontation is a tall order. Positions are
entrenched and tempers frayed. Tsipras has already offered an olive branch
by forcing the resignation of his controversial finance minister, Yanis
Varoufakis, whom the creditors detested. Now it’s up to the creditors. Be
bold, Frau Merkel: Put an end to the trench warfare and start building the
peace.

===

Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
(202) 448-2898 x1
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