• Greece
    Yanis Varoufakis on the Future of Greece and the Eurozone
    Play
    Yanis Varoufakis discusses the Greek economy, austerity measures in the European Union, and challenges facing the Eurozone.
  • Greece
    What’s Next for Greece?
    Alexis Tsipras’ return as Greek prime minister will do little to alter the country’s dire economic conditions, which require debt relief, says expert Eleni Panagiotarea.
  • Europe
    Greece Remains on Track
      The Greek elections on Sunday returned the Syriza-led coalition government, a modest surprise following polls showing a close race that might have left a deadlocked parliament. Most commenters took the result as positive for Greece’s reform effort.  Certainly, the government now has a strengthened mandate to implement the program that it agreed to in August.  The program’s first review, now likely in November has some tough issues (e.g., pensions, banking recapitalization) but disagreements are likely to be navigated, setting the basis for a negotiation on debt relief and the terms of an International Monetary Fund (IMF) program.  Most importantly, the ongoing European immigration crisis and other pressures on European decision making (e.g., “Brexit”) likely have reduced the appetite of even Greece’s toughest critics for a confrontation with the government.  All this points to the needed forbearance to keep the program on track. There are a few reasons for caution, which provide perspective on why I still believe that ultimately “Grexit” remains the most likely outcome and the best chance for Greece to restore growth over the longer term. Pensions and banking.  First review of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) program will see the government pushed to take further steps on pension reform, one of the toughest areas politically for the Tsipras government.  On the banking side, there are significant differences over the size of the bank recapitalization (the IMF reportedly would like to see a larger recapitalization than what the Greek government has called for, hoping to provide a buffer against future downside risks). Fiscal slippages and financing.  While anecdotally, there has been a pickup in tax collection, the August data shows that revenue remains 11.9 percent below target.  Fiscal targets are being met overall, through a massive reduction in spending that is unlikely to be sustainable.  Part of this improvement, further, relies on cash-basis accounting, and the likely continued accumulation of arrears flatters the books. Given the economic carnage associated with the showdown with creditors this summer, there likely will be slippages from what was assumed and there will be a difficult debate over whether Greece should be required to take additional austerity measures. Official creditor disputes.  If Greece is not required to take additional fiscal measures, and as a result the financing required for the program exceeds the predicted €86 billion, then who will pay?  The IMF has already signaled their willingness to lend depends on “explicit and concrete” debt relief from other official creditors, an argument that I have linked to a desire to limit their own financing.  Without a long moratorium on repayments, perhaps of 30 years, or a reduction in the value of the debt, the burden will become unmanageable, the IMF has argued. But even if European creditors meet the IMF demand, there could be a residual financing need in excess of what the IMF is comfortable providing. While the agreement in principle calls on the Europeans to meet any financing shortage, the risk in having the IMF go after the debt relief deal is that it becomes the de facto lender of last resort. In sum, Sunday’s election eliminates one set of risks facing the Greek effort to return to growth in the eurozone.  Harder tests remain.
  • Global
    The World Next Week: August 13, 2015
    Podcast
    Brazil braces for anti-government protests; Greece reaches a payment deadline and Russia and China hold military exercises.
  • Europe
    The Fallacy of Euro-Area Discipline
    Throughout the Greek crisis, policymakers have acted on the assumption that Greece’s best chance at sustainable growth is through the conditionality and discipline of an IMF-EU adjustment program. Already, the desire to stay in the eurozone and receive the promised rescue package of at least €86 billion has led to significant legislative measures, and the ESM and IMF programs under negotiation will be comprehensive in the scope of their structural reforms. In contrast, "Grexit" would be chaotic, and at least initially, make it difficult for any government to reach consensus on strong policies needed to restore durable growth. In that environment, the boost to growth from devaluation could prove short-lived. A recent article in the European Central Bank’s May Economic Bulletin provides a note of caution with this conclusion. It finds that, looking across Europe since 1999, there has been little economic convergence inside the Eurozone. Instead, the bulk of the convergence that has taken place has occurred in the non-euro area countries of Eastern Europe (see chart). Within the Eurozone, easy capital flows prior to the crisis and an incomplete economic and financial union prevented shocks from being adequately buffered, and has limited growth in periphery countries. They conclude policies matter: "An important lesson from the euro area sovereign debt crisis is that the need for sound economic policies does not end once a country has adopted the euro. There are no automatic mechanisms to ensure that the process of nominal convergence which occurs before adoption of the euro produces sustainable real convergence thereafter. The global financial crisis that started in 2008 has showed that some countries participating in Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) had severe weaknesses in their structural and institutional set-up. This has resulted in a large and protracted fall in real per capita income levels in these countries since 2008." This is not an argument for Grexit. The reverse also holds: the need for sound policies does not end once a country has left the Eurozone. Rather, their work reinforces the notion that it is ownership of the reform process by the government and its population, rather than the discipline that comes from euro area membership, that is the single most important factor behind a successful adjustment effort.
  • Germany
    The View From Germany on Greece
    Germany’s insistence upon Greek reform is not about inflicting humiliation or exacting revenge, but rather making the country economically viable in the long term, says expert Ulrich Speck.
  • Greece
    Greece's Euro Future and U.S. Policy
    In his testimony before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations' Subcommittee on Europe and Regional Security Cooperation, Robert Kahn argues that although Greece's direct trade and financial links to the U.S. economy are small and there is less of a direct systemic threat to the United States than when the crisis began in 2009, the risks are still material. What happens in coming days and months can have dramatic consequences for Europe and for the global economy. Takeaways: The plan between Greece and its official creditors is a framework for a deal, not a deal itself, with many details still to be negotiated. Greece in the past two weeks has passed significant reforms of the tax, judicial, and banking systems, but there is a long road ahead and there will be political and economic challenges well beyond anything this or previous Greek governments have been able to manage. Any program that keeps Greece in the eurozone is going to be expensive. The agreement envisages a financing gap of 86 billion euros over the next three years, of which a little more than half goes to meeting debt service. The rest would allow for fiscal financing, elimination of arrears, and a comprehensive fix of the banking system. But the amount is likely to grow, due to inevitable slippages and a rising bill from the recent banking system closure. European debt remains a critical hole in the international financial architecture. There is a policy for private sector involvement, and there is the Paris Club for developing countries. But the debt overhang in Europe has become a destabilizing force. It is important to recognize that any International Monetary Fund (IMF) program contains risks. It will need to provide exceptional access, and even with debt relief it will not meet the test of "high probability of debt sustainability" required under IMF rules. Pragmatism will be needed.  As in 2010, a strict rules-based approach could be equivalent to forcing Greece out of the eurozone. The rapid growth of financial markets and greater integration into the global economy by large developing countries offer important possibilities for development and growth. However, when crises do occur, the financing needs are large relative to the resources the Fund has at hand. This is causing increasing conflict between official creditors and, when gaps emerge, forces restructuring. These tensions will only grow in coming years. From this perspective, it is critically important that we work to modernize the IMF.  And we cannot achieve this objective unless IMF quota reform is passed. We have a shared interest with our European partners in establishing a Greece—inside or outside the eurozone—that is competitive and growing. We also have a strong interest in a cohesive and economically prosperous Europe.  What happens in the coming months could go a long way to addressing these concerns.
  • Europe
    Greece: The Hardest Month
    Greek banks reopened today, but there isn’t much you can do at them. Capital controls and withdrawal limits remain in effect, money transfers are barred (except for tax, social security or a few other allowed domestic transactions) and new accounts or loans effectively ruled out. Greeks now will be able to deposit checks, access safety deposit boxes, and withdraw money without an ATM card. All good things, though I suspect that any political boost from the visuals relating to reopening will proved short-lived. Amidst concern that the financing needs will outstrip the three-year, €86 billion financing gap agreed last weekend, attention now turns to the €30-40 billion European rescue facility (ESM) that must be negotiated quickly. This occurs against an unsettled political backdrop—a second vote this Wednesday on justice and banking reforms should pass, but may see more defections from the government side than last week’s vote. With new elections now expected for September or October, there is a narrow window in which to get a financing agreement done. Meanwhile, industrial activity data show a continuing decline, and anecdotal evidence suggests a continuing, broad-based drop in activity. The €7.2 billion bridge loan released today will allow the government to meet ECB payments and eliminate arrears to the IMF and Greek central bank, stepping back from one cliff. But now the question of reactivating an economy that ground to a halt during the crisis moves to the fore, and the imposition of new taxes approved last week will not help in the near term. The banks will remain in this semi-frozen state pending an asset review and recapitalization (and bail in of unsecured creditors) expected by early 2016. Unrealistic expectations about a return to economic normalcy may represent the most immediate threat to the program in coming days. This is why I believe, like others (for example, here), that “Grexit” remains the most likely outcome. As the reality of the path the government has chosen sets in, the next month may prove the most difficult yet.
  • Global
    The World Next Week: July 16, 2015
    Podcast
    Iran and world powers move forward with a nuclear deal; Greece reaches a payment deadline to the European Central Bank and U.S. President Barack Obama travels to East Africa.
  • Europe
    Greece’s Program: First Hurdle Cleared
    The Greek parliament last night passed the first package of measures required by the government’s agreement with European governments reached over the weekend, winning 229 of 300 votes in the parliament. There were a large number of Syriza defections (39) that would appear at minimum to require a cabinet reshuffling. Some local analysts predict the government could fall, though most expect that if that happened Prime Minister Tsipras would reemerge as prime minister in a new coalition government. These are only the first steps on a very long path for Greece, and the tight timeline for passage of comprehensive legislation suggests political paralysis is an unaffordable luxury. Passage of first stage measures will set the stage for a €7 billion bridge loan--likely from an EU rescue facility (EFSM) if objections from non-euro members can be overcome--that would allow Greece to meet external debt payments due Monday. More significantly in the near term, the ECB is expected to expand emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) on Thursday, which will ensure there are euros in the system. But these measures are not sufficient to reopen the banks, or reactivate an economy devastated by the crisis. To take that critical next step requires an agreement on an program with European creditors that would provide €40-50 billion in financing from the European Stability mechanism (ESM). The notional deadline for that agreement appears to be mid-August, when another round of external debt payments loom, but domestic pressures on the government to reactivate the economy ahead of the ESM disbursements is one of the most significant threats to the process and one of the central scenarios whereby the government chooses Grexit over remaining within the eurozone. The third piece of the Greek package, financial assistance from IMF, has drawn a lot of attention following release by Fund staff of a new debt sustainability assessment showing that the proposed policies, even if fully implemented and successful, would lead to debt levels close to 200 percent of GDP and gross financing needs of over 15 percent of GDP. The IMF suggests that, for a Greek program to make sense, it needs to include nominal haircuts or very long grace periods on payment (as much as 30 years). The IMF’s document has been read by some as suggesting the Fund will not lend if these levels of relief are not delivered. I’m skeptical. Ultimately the Fund will find it extremely hard to say no when its major shareholders are so committed to the program, even if the program doesn’t meet the Fund’s internal rules (including a high probability that the debt is sustainable). Nonetheless, the IMF is right to be concerned about both financing and debt, and of being pulled into a financing arrangement that it does not believe in.  On the financing side, the gap is set at around €85 billion, and could well be higher with normal slippages and hidden losses in the banking system.  With only around half the financing coming from the ESM program, and seemingly unrealistic assumptions including €50 billion from privatization, there would seem to be substantial risks of a unfilled gap that the IMF would be pressed to fill. In the IMF’s current Greek program, there is €16.4 billion that is undisbursed and available between now and March 2016. But a new program now looks likely adding materially to their exposure, and in the absence of adequate financing and debt relief, risks making the IMF a de facto lender of last resort. On the debt side, the IMF has been pressing Europe for a number of years for a more realistic policy on debt.  After all, there are well-defined policies for dealing with excessive private debt (private sector involvement, or PSI, can be a condition for Fund lending as in Ukraine recently) and for the official debt of developing countries (through the Paris Club, an informal grouping of official creditors). But European creditors, for a range of economic, legal and precedential reasons, have been deeply resistant to setting such rules in place for Greece and other heavily indebted periphery countries (although granting substantial relief on an ad hoc basis). The Greek crisis now has made the debate urgent, and U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew in meeting with European leaders today will lend his support to this position (though U.S. leverage on the issue appears limited).  Actual cuts to principal appear unlikely, though long-term grace periods seem achievable. If indeed debt relief falls short of the Fund’s target, I would still expect there to be a program. That might require the Fund to adopt an optimistic (if unrealistic) assessment that the program has a high chance of success, as was done for the 2014 Ukraine program.  Alternatively, it could invoke the so-called systemic exception, a 2010 rule devised originally for Greece that would allow it to waive the debt sustainability test. The IMF would be loath to use this rule, in part because it does not see this crisis as necessarily systemic, but some of the major creditor countries may see this as a realistic acknowledgment of the geopolitical importance of  the effort to keep Greece in the eurozone. A better way to look at the IMF’s analysis (and their unusual decision to release the documents) is that battles among official creditors are becoming an increasingly common feature of the a rapidly growing international financial system. Consequently, the needs of countries in crisis are growing faster than the resources of the Fund (creating large financing gaps), and swings in capital flows can leave sovereigns with high levels of debt. From this perspective, the failure of Congress to pass IMF quota reform, and broader constraints on increasing quotas, leads to an inherent tension for the Fund, whose rules were drawn up in simpler times.  Greece represents an important, but by no means unique, test of their capacity to adapt.
  • Europe
    Greece Agreement Reached
    Here is the text of the agreement between Greece and its eurozone creditors.
  • Europe
    Greece and Europe: A Deal to Talk About a Deal
    European leaders, meeting tonight in Brussels, appear to have given Greece something close to a take-it-or-leave-it offer.  If the Greek government can pass far-reaching reforms by Wednesday, creditors will provide bridge financing to meet near-term debt payments and cash to reopen the banks.  These steps also would allow a rebuilding of trust and allow negotiations on a third bailout that could total €86 billion to proceed. It is unclear as of now whether the Greek government will take this deal, or end negotiations knowing that a failure tonight could signal Greece’s exit from the eurozone. Even if Prime Minister Tsipras does agree to these measures, the risk of failure is high, and deteriorating economic and financial conditions will further stress the government.  Already there are reports of significant fissures within the ruling Syriza party, which could result in a political realignment (and possibly an unaffordable delay) if the government is forced to rely on substantial opposition support to pass these measures. At this stage, it is hard to have much confidence that this route will lead to a Greece that is competitive and growing sustainably within the eurozone. What creditors are offering The proposal, as reported by various news agencies, requires the Greek government to pass a broad range of reforms by Wednesday, July 15. These include: substantial VAT and pension reforms; a new code of civil procedure as part of judicial overhaul; full implementation of past EU laws, including procedures for automatic fiscal cuts when targets are not met; and, implementation of bank recovery and resolution directive as first step towards fixing the banks. Many of these proposals had been floated in earlier rounds of negotiations, but the requirement that they all be passed by Wednesday is daunting. Conditional on above, negotiations will be launched on a third bailout package and would include further reforms including: (i) Eliminating the pension deficit (that now stands at 10 percent of GDP); (ii) Adoption of ambitious product market reforms; (iii) Privatization of the electricity transmission network (ADMIE); (iv) A comprehensive labor market review including collective bargaining, industrial action and collective dismissals and a commitment to European best practice; (v) Large-scale privatization, including the possibility that €50 billion of assets would be turned over to an EU-controlled facility; and (vi) Broad-based administrative reform. The financing program would be between €82 and €86 billion. Most of the funding would come from the European rescue facility (ESM), but IMF monitoring and financing is a precondition for a new ESM arrangement. Financial support would include a near-term bridge of around €7 billion by July 20 and another €5 billion by mid-August that would allow it to meet upcoming debt payments and clear arrears with the IMF, but fiscal support for the reactivation of the economy would appear to wait for the approval of the larger program later this summer. I assume that a possibly significant expansion of emergency liquidity (ELA) by the ECB would be part of the package. There is no explicit commitment to debt relief in the proposal, meeting German concerns about setting new precedent but denying Greece political cover that they had sought for the reform package. Longer grace and repayment periods would be considered conditional on full implementation of measures and after a positive first review of a new program, so around end year. Finally, there has been discussion that Greece would take a "time out" from the eurozone if a deal can’t be agreed, with the promise of a return at some future date.  This is clearly provocative and probably not essential to a deal. Ambitious but likely to fail This is an extraordinary ambitious package, and includes an intrusive continuing role for the Troika (IMF, ECB, and EU). Further, as difficult as passage of the July 15th measures will be, the requirements for a third bailout looks to be an even more substantial ask of the Greek government, which raises the prospect that the stage one agreement is a bridge to another confrontation and crisis. As I mentioned earlier today, the massive financing need is a problem.  There are hints in the document that that financing could fall short, which would then require additional fiscal adjustment or privatization measures. (Greece has already strongly objected to turning over privatization assets to a EU-controlled institution.) It also is unclear whether a buffer fund of €10-25 billion for recapitalization and resolution costs is included in the gap or additional, but in either case the banking costs are substantial and growing by the day. The IMF cannot be thrilled by the proposal. The IMF has been wary about committing financing to a package that doesn’t have debt relief, which is not explicit here, and should worry that they will be asked to pick up the residual if financing falls short. Their exposure is already high and exceptional access would be difficult to justify in these conditions under their rules.  Meanwhile, the Greeks would far prefer to not have a new IMF arrangement. Both sides look like they will be disappointed on this point. In sum, a very tough and risky choice for Greece. Negotiations are continuing, but aside from some hot button issues (e.g., privatization) and some smaller issues on the margins, there would appear to be little appetite for additional concessions from creditors.  We should learn soon which direction Greece will take.
  • Europe
    Greece: Europe Divides, Deal Elusive, Grexit Looms
    European finance ministers are meeting this morning amidst deep divides over whether, and on what terms, to provide a lifeline to Greece. Finance Ministers will not agree to a deal, with Germany (and other skeptical governments) resisting pressure from France and Italy for concessions to Greece. Leaders will have to decide. As of this writing, it looks likely that there could be some broad agreement to negotiate a deal, but not a deal itself. Greece will be asked to take a number of tough upfront measures, actions that will politically and economically stress the country beyond anything we have seen to date. If this is too much to ask, and it may well be, Greece’s exit from the Eurozone could quickly follow. The gridlock in Brussels reflects three basic forces at work. The need is massive. The Greek request was for €53.5 billion (around $59 billion) over three years, but the actual need is much greater. Factoring in a realistic assessment of the damage caused by the standoff, as well as a rapidly rising cost to recapitalize the banks, and the bill soars to over $80 billion for the three years. While more than half reflects debt service (total amortization over the period equals €30 billion and interest payments another €17 billion, the majority of which is owed to European creditor governments) the commitment of new money, after so many failed efforts, is proving to be a huge impediment to action. The financing gap also forces the IMF back to the table, as their money will now be needed. The dire state of the Greek economy has forced realism, making kick-the-can solutions harder to justify. Trust is missing. The standoff of the last several months has destroyed trust between the sides, making it far more difficult for some governments (Germany importantly, but they are not alone) to accept the political and financial costs of a multi-year financing package when so much depends on implementation by the Greek government. In an odd way, the decision by the Greek government to do a U-turn on Thursday and in essence fully accept creditor proposals that it had previously railed against validated skeptics’ view that their commitment to implement reform is weak. The program is likely to fail. To paraphrase a popular commercial, finance ministers negotiate deals: that’s what they do. But getting a deal done isn’t success unless it charts a course for Greece to become competitive and generate sustainable growth within the eurozone. Otherwise, any deal—even if Europe bends on debt relief so that the numbers add up—is a bridge to nowhere. I still believe there is a path forward for Greece—a “grand bargain” that combines a massive reform effort with massive financing and debt relief—but the window is narrow and there is no doubt that the events of the past month have raised significant doubts among European leaders as to whether Greece—economically and politically, can manage a transition where previous Greek governments have failed. Even the best designed program begins with a high probability of failure. At the same time, it is hard to see how Greece can survive much longer without an up-front infusion of cash that keeps euros in the ATMs and supports private activity. This will require forbearance on the part of the ECB, and that in turn requires backing from leaders.  As I have argued from the start of this crisis, ultimately it is domestic economic and financial conditions, and the stress caused by arrears and a breakdown of the Greek financial system, that will determine the timing of the Grexit decision. From caterpillar to butterfly Slovak Finance Minister Peter Kazimir on Saturday summarized his skepticism in a tweet: Following latest developments, listening to #Greece govt officials one can wonder how quickly can caterpillar turn into butterfly #Eurozone — Peter Kažimír (@KazimirPeter) July 10, 2015 To do that in the first instance means quickly implementing a number of early actions that show a commitment to reform, and agree on a number of additional actions. According to leaks this morning, those additional actions include: (i) Ambitious pension reforms to fully eliminate the pension deficit (currently, the drain on the budget from pensions stands at around 10 percent of GDP); (ii) More ambitious product market reforms ; (iii) Privatization of the electricity transmission network operator (ADMIE); (iv) On labor markets, best practice on collective bargaining, pay and labor practices inconsistent with Syriza election promises; and, (v) Aggressive actions to clean up the banking system. Finland already has made clear its opposition to any deal, and finance ministers from a few other small countries have signaled their concerns. Under the EU’s emergency procedures, a deal can be agreed with support of 85 percent, so that small-country opposition cannot stop an agreement, but it raises the political hurdle for leaders already under pressure from legislatures back home. A further impediment at this point is Germany’s steadfast refusal to accept a nominal haircut on the debt, which it sees as a violation of EU rules and a dangerous precedent. While very substantial debt relief can be provided through a further extension of maturities and low interest rates, the IMF has already made it clear that it thinks that nominal haircuts will eventually be needed. And, given the significant austerity that is being asked of it, it will be difficult for the Greek government to sign a deal that doesn’t contain at least a nod in this direction. In the first post on this blog, I called for a Paris Club for Europe, an idea Germany has for the first time yesterday hinted at in a non-paper circulating at the meeting. Something along these lines will need to be part of any long-term solution if indeed we are to see a butterfly take flight.
  • Europe
    Greece and the Eurozone: Time to Decide
    Another cliff in the never-ending Greek drama, as European leaders set a Sunday deadline for a deal. It’s easy to be cynical, but Europe could look very different next week. I now think that “Grexit” is very likely, and it could happen soon. Later today or tomorrow, the Greek government will unveil its financing and policy proposals, launching what is expected to be an intense set of negotiations over the next several days. In a telling move, it was announced that all twenty-eight European Union leaders plan to meet on Sunday to discuss contingency plans for a Greek exit from the euro, but not the European Union. If there is an agreement in principal by then, the meeting can be cancelled (and presumably replaced by a meeting of the nineteen euro area members to approve a Greek deal). Statements from the European Central Bank also signaled that if there were no deal by Sunday, it would be forced to end its emergency assistance to the Greek banking system, which would precipitate the immediate and full failure of the banks. In a further setback, a scheduled meeting of finance ministers was cancelled this morning and it was announced that the Greek proposals would be dealt with in a working group.  There is a lot of work to do and not much time. After months of false showdowns, there are a number of reasons to treat Sunday’s deadline more seriously. Conditions in Greece are deteriorating rapidly. ATMs are close to running out of euros, which will cause severe problems for pensioners and others dependent on the banking system and cash. Further, the lack of finance and imports is increasingly disruptive to private activity—supply chains are breaking down, critical inputs running short. These conditions will put immense pressure on the Greek government to issue IOUs and change laws to put purchasing power in the hands of those most in need. That means a new currency in practice, if not in law. These measures quickly will become hard (but not impossible) to reverse. On the creditor side, we should not underestimate the role of rising parliamentary and public opposition to another bailout for Greece (and not solely in Germany). This limits the willingness and ability of leaders to compromise (more than finance ministers, leaders feel this pressure). There was a strong expectation among leaders that the Greek government would present a concrete proposal yesterday. When they did not—their informal ideas on a two stage approach with bridge financing for reforms setting the stage for a bigger deal later represents a step backwards in some respects—a perception that Greece does not want a deal became further entrenched. There were some small bits of good news from yesterday’s meetings. The cross-party statement of support Prime Minister Tsipras received over the weekend and the statement by the new finance minister yesterday called only for initiation of a meaningful discussion on the necessary restructuring of the debt. That was a softening of their earlier demand for a hard commitment to debt relief, and seems more feasible. Further, though a reported French-led effort to generate some concessions to Greece through a two-stage approach flopped, there does seem to be momentum (backed by EU bureaucratic machinery) for continued, serious negotiations in coming days. Sunday is not a final deadline. There are creative ways to find bridge financing (including addressing a large July 20 payment due to the ECB) so that even without a deal, it will still be possible to pull Greece back from the brink in coming weeks. The primary impediment to a deal at this stage is policy, not financing.  A combination of frustrated creditors and growing pressures on the Greek government mean that dramatic policy reforms are needed for Greece to survive within the eurozone, and I sense little room for compromise on the part of creditors. There seems to be a belated understanding that populism and fixed exchange rate regimes make poor bedfellows. The Tsipras government will need to commit to tough reforms, crossing many if not all of their red lines on pensions, taxes, and labor markets.  It is time for Greece to decide.
  • Greece
    Global Economics Monthly: July 2015
    Bottom Line: If Greece exits the eurozone, introducing a new currency could occur quickly; getting the policies right is the more difficult challenge facing the country. Greece is engaged in last-ditch negotiations with creditors over policies, financing, and debt relief. Without a deal, Greece is headed down a path that could lead to its exit from the eurozone. There is a widely held belief that introducing a new currency will be difficult, perhaps prohibitively so. Amid crisis and chaos, efforts by a discredited Greek government to reintroduce the drachma would lead to further economic chaos, rapid depreciation, and hyperinflation. Some economists have even argued that a currency reform would fail, leaving Greece like Montenegro—without an effective currency and operating on the euro but outside of the eurozone. In fact, the opposite is the case: introducing a new currency is the easy part. Much harder will be the task of building a social consensus in Greece—inside or outside of the euro—for sustainable and growth-promoting economic policies. Euro or Drachma: The Pressure to Decide Much of the discussion about Greece remaining in the eurozone has focused on whether it is part of an optimal currency area with the rest of Europe.  This is part of a broader debate over whether Greece can be competitive and grow within the eurozone. Even those who believe the answer is yes, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), acknowledge that the path for success is narrow. There is likely one last chance to reach a comprehensive agreement that combines significant policy reform with upfront debt reduction and adequate financial support. But financial conditions in Greece leave little time for negotiations. As of this writing, Greek banks remain closed and ATMs have run out of euros, which means the formal payments system consists of electronic transfers into blocked accounts. The economy, to the extent that it is operating, relies almost exclusively on barter. In this environment, Greece shows three characteristics common to many countries that have chosen to reform or change their currencies: a government unable to finance essential services (i.e., in fiscal crisis), sufficient legal and political control to enforce the currency used in commerce within its borders, and politically unacceptable distributional consequences to remaining fully reliant on barter. The government could begin to issue IOUs to address the fiscal issue, but not the distributional costs of the bank closure. There is a broad group of Greeks, including pensioners, who rely on cash from ATMs to survive. An IOU, unless it can be easily bartered for goods and services, will not address their concerns. In some cases, such as Argentina before its exit from its currency board in 2002, a market for these IOUs developed that allowed cash to circulate within the economy. The deep discount on those IOUs became a proxy for the value of the new currency that ultimately replaced them. Here, however, without a credible bank-based payments system, it is hard to see such a market surviving in Greece. In this environment, the pressure to change currency policy is substantial. The critical question from this perspective is not whether such a move meets the test of an optimal currency area. That question is usually answered with an assessment of whether the geographic and policy situation makes the currency an effective store of value, unit of account, and medium of exchange—the well-established purposes economists look to in assessing the efficiency of money. The real issue is whether the state has the authority to implement the move; that is, can it force citizens to accept the currency within its borders, to use it to pay taxes, or to accept it in return for services to the government. And from this perspective, even amid the chaos, the answer in Greece is yes. This idea, that decisions on currency are ultimately driven by questions of state power, is what economist Charles Goodhart calls the “cartalist” theory of money. As Goodhart and others have pointed out, there is a strand running through cases as diverse as ancient Rome’s use of a cow standard for its currency (the word pecuniary comes from pecus, the Latin word for cow), the U.S. confederacy’s rapid introduction of a new currency after the Civil War began, and the breakup of the former Soviet Union: the evolution of money is linked to the state’s need to increase its power and to command resources through monetization of its ability to spend and tax. Currency Reform Lessons A successful currency reform requires meeting a number of conditions over months or even years, including implementing legislation, issuance of new notes and coins, and measures to recapitalize and reopen the banking system. But the rich diversity of experiences regarding the introduction of a new currency affirms that this rarely happens by the book, and almost never when the change is driven by an economic crisis. At its most basic, the introduction of a new currency can be as easy as stamping the existing notes with a mark as a transitional measure until the new currency is developed. Brazil’s transition from the cruzeiro to the real began by establishing “units of real value” as market-based units of account, and gradually adding other functions as the currency moved to legal tender. The Real Plan showed that a gradual transition can soften concerns about weak monetary institutions. Analysts often point to the breakup of the former Soviet Union for examples of countries that moved to introduce their own currency only after detailed planning and preparation. But that was not always the case. In June 1992, months before the collapse of the ruble zone was certain, Estonia became the first of fourteen countries to break from the currency union. Over a weekend, Estonia abandoned the ruble and relaunched the kroon as the sole legal tender. The Bank of Estonia, which a year earlier had only twenty-five employees, had neither the experience nor institutional capacity that the Bank of Greece has; and tensions with Russia and the former Soviet republics made it difficult to discuss settlement arrangements for a currency transition. As a result, the currency fluctuated wildly at first, though it eventually stabilized and provided support for the subsequent economic transition. Tight fiscal policy and structural reforms complemented the rigidity of the currency board, easing Estonia into a market economy. There are costs to these types of transitions, notably in reduced credibility for the new currency. A rapid introduction of a new currency raises the risk of counterfeiting, fraud, or abuse. But, in the end, macroeconomic and structural policies determine the success of a new currency, rather than logistical or legal questions. I have argued elsewhere that there is one last chance to reach a deal that keeps Greece in the eurozone, and if that fails an exit makes most sense for Greece and for Europe. But exit, depreciation, and default will not provide the basis for long-term growth absent structural reforms that enhance the credibility of the new currency and support the transformation of the economy. Today, achieving these structural reforms appears a hard task for any Greek government. Looking Ahead: Kahn's take on the news on the horizon More Than Stopgap Measures for Ukraine While Ukraine continues to negotiate with creditors over a debt restructuring, attention shifts to longer-term financing needs and the proper role for Western governments. Waiting for Normalization The Federal Reserve looks poised for an interest-rate liftoff later this year, but markets expect monetary policy to remain highly accommodative. Trade Advances Now that the U.S. Congress has passed trade promotion authority, there is pressure to conclude the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement by the fall.