- Business Spectator
- February 10, 2015
GREECE should exit the eurozone ASAP. In fact, I’m not sure why they haven’t done it already. They should quickly reintroduce the drachma and devalue it by a lot.
Last night, the new Prime Minister, Alexis Tsipras, made a defiant speech to Parliament, which was a good start. He laid out plans to dismantle what he called Greece’s ‘cruel’ austerity program and ruled out any extension of the bailout.The Athens bank share index promptly dropped 10 per cent, the Greek market as a whole fell 5 per cent and the yield on its three-year government notes rose 366 basis points.
It’s true that Greece’s financial system would be bankrupted by replacing the euro with the drachma, since the banks’ assets would be in devalued drachmas while the debts remained in euros, and the nation itself would have to default on its debts. But as Mr Tsipras well knows, debt defaulters are always forgiven.
In fact, in 377AD Greece became the first nation in history to default on its debts and has spent about half of its period of independence over the past century in a state of default.
The list of countries that have defaulted include the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, France, Denmark, Sweden, The Netherlands and, let it not be forgotten, the United States.
Not only was Greece forgiven its many defaults by the world’s banks, it was invited to join the eurozone (having cooked the books just a bit) and last year the yield on its sovereign 10-year bond traded down to below 6 per cent. Talk about not learning from history! It’s now back at 11 per cent, and the three-year bond is at 22 per cent).
So, while it’s true that if Greece returned to the drachma it would be excluded from capital markets for a while, it really would only be for a while.
In the meantime, there would be long queues of tourists at Athens Airport and crowding onto ferries into the Aegean Sea. Tourism would soar, as would its shipping industry, along with the flowering of a thousand export industries.
If currency manipulation was good enough for China when it came to rebuilding its export industries, why not for Greece?
Of course, the question is whether Germany would actually let Greece exit the eurozone, and the answer is definitely “Nein!”
Germany needs Greece (and Italy and Spain) inside the euro to keep the currency down. In a way, the existence of the eurozone is a form of currency manipulation by Germany that’s every bit as direct and effective as China’s peg to the US dollar.
As a case in point, over the past 12 months the Australian dollar has actually appreciated against the euro by 7 per cent while depreciating against the US dollar by 12 per cent.
As a result, sales of Audi rose 20 per cent last year, Mercedes Benz 16 per cent and BMW 11 per cent.
If Greece were to leave the euro, Germany’s big carmakers would suddenly become uncompetitive, along with Germany’s other exporters, and have to leave as well.
If Greece left, then so would Italy, Spain, Portugal and Cyprus. As a result, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and France would be left with the world’s strongest currency and the collapse of their export industries.
They will not allow this to happen, which is why Mr Tsipras is so cocky and defiant. He can, and will, drive a very hard bargain because he knows that Germany needs Greece more than Greece needs Germany.
In fact, it is fair to say that joining the euro has done Greece a great deal of damage, so that there is a case for Greece exiting no matter what enticements are eventually offered to them to stay.
As Alexis Tsipras told the Greek Parliament last night: “ … the bailout was cancelled by its own failure and destructive results.”
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Merkel prepared to let Greece exit eurozone: report
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/afp-merkel-prepared-to-let-greece-exit-eurozone-report-2015-1#ixzz3ROFZRuJ3
© AFP/File Thierry Charlier
The report, which cited sources close to the German government, comes as polls show a radical leftist party leading the field three weeks ahead of a snap election in Greece.
The Syriza party of Alexis Tsipras has pledged to reverse reforms imposed by Greece's international creditors and renegotiate its bailout deal.
"The German government considers a eurozone exit (by Greece) to be almost inevitable if opposition leader Alexis Tsipras leads the government after the election and abandons budgetary discipline and does not repay the country's debts," Der Spiegel reported on its website.
Both Merkel and Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble had come to view a potential Greek exit from the 19-currency eurozone in a less dramatic light, the report explained.
They both now felt such an outcome would be "bearable", Der Spiegel quoted unnamed sources as saying.
The recovery underway in other formerly problem economies such as Ireland and Portugal, establishment of a permanent eurozone bailout fund and creation of a banking union all bolstered Berlin's belief that the contagion from a fresh Greek crisis would be limited, the report added.
Greece's parliament was dissolved Wednesday after the assembly failed to agree on a successor to outgoing President Karolos Papoulias in three successive votes.
The dissolution of parliament triggered a snap election that will take place on January 25.
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/afp-merkel-prepared-to-let-greece-exit-eurozone-report-2015-1#ixzz3ROFhlB2L
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