[Right at the moment, a battle of nerves - a tough tug-of-war, is on.
No one wants to be the first to blink.
All at the same time, the four main players - the Syriza regime, the
IMF, the ECB and the EC - directly engaged are, apparently, rather
interested in avoiding the looming Grexit, given its likely unsettling
consequences, all across the divide. But only on their own terms, as
much as possible. (Either way, the ruling financial doctrine kept in
place, based on the "Washington consensus, is under serious threat.)
That makes the things really tricky and the eventual Grexit quite
probable as the final outcome of this eyeball-to-eyeball
confrontation.
But the final word remains to be spelled out.]

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21656662-whatever-its-outcome-greek-crisis-will-change-eu-ever-europes-future-greeces

The euro and Greece
Europe’s future in Greece’s hands

Whatever its outcome, the Greek crisis will change the EU for ever
Jul 4th 2015

THE European Union has never seen the like of the past eight days in
Greece: barred banks, capital controls, the first IMF default by a
developed country, the collapse of a multi-billion-euro bail-out,
plans for a referendum that may hasten Greece’s ejection from the
single currency, and the beggary of the people. Were the stakes not so
high, all those emergency summits and last-minute demands would count
as farce.


Instead it is a tragedy, where an outcome that all sides say they do
not want—Greece’s exit from the euro—seems increasingly likely. The
chaos is evidence that leaving the euro would be disastrous for
Greece, not least because modest gains from default and devaluation
would be overwhelmed by political and economic instability. For the
rest of Europe, too, “Grexit” has well-rehearsed risks, notably that
of a failing state on the continent’s south-eastern flank. But as the
drama has become more desperate, so Europeans seem less worried. They
take comfort from the fact that Greece is uniquely dysfunctional.
Game-playing and repeated miscalculation have poisoned the
negotiations (see article). Without Greece, many now conclude, the
euro zone might actually be more stable.

Sadly, that is wrong. Look beyond Greece, and the threat of further
conflict within the euro is all but inevitable. Although Greece’s
departure would prove the euro is not irrevocable, nobody would know
what rule-breaking would lead to expulsion. Nor would it resolve the
inevitable polarisation of debtor and creditor governments in
bail-outs. If the single currency does not face up to the need for
reform, then this crisis or the next will witness more Greeces, more
blunders and more dismal weeks. In time, that will wreck the euro and
the EU itself.

Don’t chuck it away
Just now this argument is obscured by Greece’s hard-left Syriza
government and its absurd referendum. Assuming it happens, Sunday’s
vote will ask Greeks to assess the creditors’ restructuring plan
(which is no longer on offer) and their debt-sustainability analysis
(which requires a degree in economics). The prime minister, Alexis
Tsipras, says a No will strengthen his hand with creditors and so help
keep Greece in the euro. European leaders retort that a No is in fact
a vote to leave. After a Yes, Mr Tsipras might cling on or, if he
goes, Greece might re-elect Syriza, but both have campaigned for a No.
It is not a high point for the country of Plato.

Back in the real world, Greece is running out of money. The European
Central Bank (ECB) refuses to give the banks more liquidity and they
are tottering. If Greece defaults on €3.5 billion-worth ($3.9 billion)
of bond payments to the ECB on July 20th, pressure will build to
withdraw even today’s backing. The government will soon start paying
its bills with IOUs that, in time, will become a parallel currency.
Each step makes Grexit more likely. Moreover, for Greece to return to
normality will require ever more nous and skill—and a lack of both in
Mr Tsipras is part of the reason why his country is so lost.

Mr Tsipras’s uselessness is his own fault. But neither the election of
Syriza’s ragbag of leftists in January nor their brinkmanship was an
accident. Greek GDP shrank by a quarter over five years, unemployment
is over 25% and youth unemployment over 50%. Partly to blame is
austerity imposed by creditors who, especially in the early years,
sought to bring down Greece’s budget deficit too far too fast. Greece
eventually started to grow again, but the slump discredited the
establishment. Syriza came to power on the fantasy that Greeks could
both end their hardship and also be welcome within the euro. Mr
Tsipras thought he had bargaining power and as it has drained away he
has looked increasingly erratic.

Omega hour
His miscalculation is prompted by tension at the heart of the euro
project. Mr Tsipras believed that a cave-in by the creditors was
inevitable because they are determined that the euro should stick
together. But the creditors would not be blackmailed into subsidising
endless delinquency, because they are adamant that the system must
have discipline. Mr Tsipras negotiated as a sovereign leader with a
democratic mandate; but northern European leaders represent voters,
too, and they never signed up to a system of large unconditional
transfers.

Brinkmanship and crisis are inevitable in such a system. And they are
aggravated by the euro zone’s reliance on ad hoc bail-outs, which
politicise every decision. They set one side against another, breeding
contempt among the creditors and resentment among the debtors. They
turn wise policies into concessions that should not be given up to the
other side until the last minute. No wonder the process has failed: at
crunch time more than 20 negotiating parties, all with vetoes, were
working to different agendas and haggling under pressure. The same
downward spiral is all too plausible in a future crisis: the ruination
of politics and the economy as demands for forgiveness from debtor
nations like Italy or Portugal, say, founder on demands for austerity
from Germany and Finland.

Right now Greeks need a new prime minister. Relations with the devious
Mr Tsipras are shattered: with him in charge, they will struggle to
stay in the euro. In the longer run, the euro zone needs shoring up. A
stable currency is a trade off with fiscal sovereignty. To protect
against downturns, euro-zone members must create automatic mechanisms,
such as collective unemployment insurance, that channel extra funds to
countries in recession. Instead of bail-outs, the single-currency area
needs more joint pooling of risk and responsibility—some form of
“Eurobonds” or jointly guaranteed sovereign debt—governed by fiscal
rules more binding than today’s.

The bloc knows that it needs to change. It has moved towards banking
union; five of its leaders have issued a paper on how to strengthen
the euro, including, among other ideas, a deposit-insurance scheme.
But their proposals are modest because governments are harried by
anti-EU populists and their citizens did not sign up to the euro
expecting to give up a lot more sovereignty. The moral of Greece’s
disaster is that Europeans must face up to the euro’s contradictions
now—or suffer the consequences in more ruinous circumstances.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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