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A Greek Suicide?

dancingshoes

Alfrescian
Loyal
LONDON – The good news is that a Greek default, which has become more likely after Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ provocative rejection of what he described as the “absurd” bailout offer by Greece’s creditors, no longer poses a serious threat to the rest of Europe. The bad news is that Tsipras does not seem to understand this.
To judge by Tsipras’s belligerence, he firmly believes that Europe needs Greece as desperately as Greece needs Europe. This is the true “absurdity” in the present negotiations, and Tsipras’ misapprehension of his bargaining power now risks catastrophe for his country, humiliation for his Syriza party, or both.

The most likely outcome is that Tsipras will eat his words and submit to the conditions set by the “troika” (the European Commission, European Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund) before the end of June. If not, the ECB will stop supporting the Greek banking system, and the government will run out of money to service foreign debts and, more dramatically, to pay Greek citizens their pensions and wages. Cut off from all external finance, Greece will become an economic pariah – the Argentina of Europe – and public pressure will presumably oust Syriza from power.
This outcome is all the more tragic, given that the economic analysis underlying Syriza’s demand for an easing of austerity was broadly right. Instead of seeking a face-saving compromise on softening the troika program, Tsipras wasted six months on symbolic battles over economically irrelevant issues such as labor laws, privatizations, even the name of the troika.
This provocative behavior lost Greece all potential allies in France and Italy. Worse still, the time wasted on political grandstanding destroyed the primary budget surplus, which was Tsipras’s trump card in the early negotiations.
Now Tsipras thinks he holds another trump card: Europe’s fear of a Greek default. But this is a delusion promoted by his finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis. A professor of game theory, Varoufakis recently boasted to the New York Times that “little Greece, in order to survive, [could] bring down the financial world,” and that his media image “as an irrational fool… is doing my work for me” by frightening other EU finance ministers.
Apparently, Varoufakis believes that his “sophisticated grasp of game theory” gives Greece a crucial advantage in “the complicated dynamics” of the negotiations. In fact, the game being played out in Europe is less like chess than like tic-tac-toe, where a draw is the normal outcome, but a wrong move means certain defeat.
The rules of this game are much simpler than Varoufakis expected because of a momentous event that occurred in the same week as the Greek election. On January 22, the ECB took decisive action to protect the eurozone from a possible Greek default. By announcing a huge program of bond purchases, much bigger relative to the eurozone bond market than the quantitative easing implemented in the United States, Britain, or Japan, ECB President Mario Draghi erected the impenetrable firewall that had long been needed to protect the monetary Union from a Lehman-style financial meltdown.
The ECB’s newfound ability to print money, essentially without limit, to support both banks and governments has reduced Greek contagion to insignificance. That represents a profound change in Europe’s financial environment, which Greek politicians, along with many economic analysts, still fail to understand.
Before the ECB’s decision, contagion from Greece was a genuine threat. If the Greek government defaulted or tried to abandon the euro, Greece’s banks would collapse, and Greeks who failed to get their money out of the country would lose their savings, as occurred in Cyprus in 2013. When savers in other indebted euro countries such as Portugal and Spain observed this, they would fear similar losses and move their money to banks in Germany or Austria, as well as sell their holdings of Portuguese or Spanish government bonds.
As a result, the debtor countries’ bond prices would collapse, interest rates would soar, and banks would be threatened with collapse. If the contagion from Greece intensified, the next-weakest country, probably Portugal, would find itself unable to support its banking system or pay its debts. In extremis, it would abandon the euro, following the Greek example.
Before January, this sequence of events was quite likely, but the ECB’s bond-buying program put a firebreak at each point of the contagion process. If holders of Portuguese bonds are alarmed by a future Greek default, the ECB will simply increase its bond buying; with no limit to its buying power, it will easily overwhelm any selling pressure.
If savers in Portuguese banks start moving their money to Germany, the ECB will recycle these euros back to Portugal through interbank deposits. Again, there is no limit to how much money the ECB can recycle, provided Portuguese banks remain solvent – which they will, so long as the ECB continues to buy Portuguese government bonds.
In short, the ECB bond-buying program has transformed the ECB from a passive observer of the euro crisis, paralyzed by the outdated legalistic constraints of the Maastricht Treaty, into a proper lender of last resort. With powers to monetize government debts similar to those exercised by the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan, and the Bank of England, the ECB can now guarantee the eurozone against financial contagion.
Unfortunately for Greece, this has been lost on the Tsipras government. Greek politicians who still see the threat of financial contagion as their trump card should note the coincidence of the Greek election and the ECB’s bond-buying program and draw the obvious conclusion. The ECB’s new policy was designed to protect the euro from the consequences of a Greek exit or default.
The latest Greek negotiating strategy is to demand a ransom to desist threatening suicide. Such blackmail might work for a suicide bomber. But Greece is just holding a gun to its own head – and Europe does not need to care very much if it pulls the trigger.

Read more at http://www.project-syndicate.org/co...-anatole-kaletsky-2015-06#01jHybBLSqwflH2h.99
 

Hans168

Alfrescian
Loyal
I abhor borrowers who do not keep their promise: what a gall to 1 2 re negotiate after money taken!
To pay off they must now send shiploads of chio bu here to satisfy hungry jacks here
 

Runifyouhaveto

Alfrescian
Loyal
Don't care whether they will become Argentina-II

What matters most if they will be expelled from Eurozone

8nmni.gif
 

eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
great opportunity to visit greek islands and tragedy theater again when all are over and greece becomes a pauper cuntry out of the eurozone.
 

yinyang

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Truly, GREXIT :biggrin:

Greek regime with PM is belligerent alright. Greeks are past their great philosophers era. Even Socrates will have to eat his hat

 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Without the PAP in charge, Singapore would be in a similar position.
 

dancingshoes

Alfrescian
Loyal
US stock sell-off to gain pace if Fed hints on tightening this week


With the major US stock indexes taking their biggest hit in June yesterday on the Greek default debacle, Wall Street is worried that the Federal Reserve is still going to hike interest rates this year.

Then again some strategists are concerned that the US central bank so cautious over not making the mistakes of a long-ago ancestor – the ghost of 1937 when a premature raising of rates lengthened the Great Depression.


http://www.arabianmoney.net/us-stoc...in-pace-if-fed-hints-on-tightening-this-week/

Don’t do it!

That might make it miss a solid opportunity to normalize monetary policy after seven years of decidedly abnormal times, they claim. But what about Greece as the next Lehman? Please don’t forget that!

The IMF and World Bank have both made very public pleas to the Fed not to raise rates but some economic data is pointing to the need to tighten.

Anybody who thinks this will be good for Wall Street is clearly nuts, though pumping up a bubble cannot go on forever either. The punch bowl should have been removed from this party a long time ago…
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Why greece dont want to leave the eurozone?whats the benefit of using someone else currency being a hostage to ur creditors and loansharks?every country must have the power to print its own currency
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
6 years after the recession, Greece is still in dire straits. Greeks cannot stomach that any longer. If they had default 6 years back, they would be now recovery.

The lenders took the risk but are kept afloat because their governments are backing them to squeeze Greece. A fair deal is with both parties taking a 50 percent hit. Nope, the banks don't want to lose a cent and probably is unable to survive if they did.

Greece is better off getting out of EU and default. Then, it can craft its own economic journey.
 

dancingshoes

Alfrescian
Loyal
if greece exit, what happened to the massive amount of money in hundreds of billions they owe to Troika(ECB, IMF and other european banks)???


6 years after the recession, Greece is still in dire straits. Greeks cannot stomach that any longer. If they had default 6 years back, they would be now recovery.

The lenders took the risk but are kept afloat because their governments are backing them to squeeze Greece. A fair deal is with both parties taking a 50 percent hit. Nope, the banks don't want to lose a cent and probably is unable to survive if they did.

Greece is better off getting out of EU and default. Then, it can craft its own economic journey.
 

kiwibird7

Alfrescian
Loyal
The Greek govt would be facing a hard time in getting $$$ loans to finance their budget being a defaulter, interests rates charged for such loans could be along the rates of LOAN SHARKS! Loan shark defaulter countries like GREECE would get the O$P$ treatment, becoming safe tax havens for drug $$$ money laundering, closing both eyes to organ trafficking, people trafficking/selling off their GREEK CHIOBUs to harems of OIL RICH SHEIKHs?
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
contentious statement.
mere personal conjecture.
trying hard to incite rioting again ?

Unlike Greec, the PAP does not believe in running an eternal budget deficit. That is why Singapore is in such a healthy financial position. There is no conjecture. It's sound economic sense.
 
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