http://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2011/09/20/default-is-in-the-air/

 Default is in the airBy michael roberts

In this blog, I have advocated that part of the way out for the Greek people
in Europe’s so-called sovereign debt crisis is for their government to
negotiate a ‘restructuring’ or default on their government debt (*The end
game for the euro?* 18 August 2011; *Greece proof?*, 23 July 2011; and
*Greece:heading
for default,* 16 June 2011)).  This would be similar to the move that the
Argentine government carried out in 2001 when they made an offer to holders
of their bonds: take 40% of their value in a deal or forget it.  There was a
lot of moaning and groaning but in the end the bondholders did just that.
Argentina cuts it debt burden to foreign banks and others in one stroke.

Instead of that, the ministers in the so-called socialist PASOK government
in Greece are running around like the proverbial headless chickens trying to
come up with yet more money to satisfy the dreaded Troika of the EU, the ECB
and the IMF.  In their daily video conference calls with Brussels, Frankfurt
and Washington, they try to think of ways to hit their people again with yet
more taxes and cuts in public spending and services.  They planned a €2bn
property tax to be paid through the electricity bill on each home.  But the
Troika said it was not enough and the wrong measure.  They wanted
‘structural reforms’ to reduce ‘the size of the state’, namely another
20,000 public sector workers to be sacked on top of the 80,000 going
already.  All this is in order to pay back the banks that bought Greek
government bonds because if they don’t, the banks will go bust too.  And
these are very same banks that triggered the global financial crisis and
slump in the first place.  This Gordian knot can be cut if the Greeks
organise a default.

And the irony is that while the Greek socialist leaders rush to meet the
demands of the Troika, now many pro-capitalist commentators are raising the
idea of an ‘orderly default’ as a way out of the crisis.  Citibank economist
Willem Buiter says a default cannot be avoided, so it would be better to get
it over with along with suitable funding of other weak EMU states so the
default can be restricted to just Greece.

Joining the default chorus is Nouriel Roubini.  In an article in the FT (
http://blogs.ft.com/the-a-list/2011/09/19/greece-should-default-and-abandon-the-euro/),
he argues that: *“Greece is stuck in a vicious cycle of insolvency, low
competitiveness and ever-deepening depression. Exacerbated by a draconian
fiscal austerity, its public debt is heading towards 200 per cent of gross
domestic product. To escape,
Greece<http://www.ft.com/indepth/greece-debt-crisis>must now begin an
orderly
default<http://blogs.ft.com/gavyndavies/2011/09/14/why-mrs-merkel-fears-a-disorderly-greek-default/>,
voluntarily exit the eurozone and return to the drachma.  A return to a
national currency and a sharp depreciation would quickly restore
competitiveness and growth, as it did in Argentina and many other emerging
markets which abandoned their currency pegs.”*

Roubini raised the probability of a Greek default over a year ago, but now
he sees it not as a calamity but as a way out: *“Of course, this process
will be traumatic. The most significant problem would be capital losses for
core eurozone financial institutions. Overnight, the foreign euro
liabilities of Greece’s government, banks and firms would surge. Yet these
problems can be overcome. …  Major eurozone banks and investors would also
suffer large losses in this process, but they would be manageable too – if
these institutions are properly and aggressively recapitalised. Avoiding a
post-exit implosion of the Greek banking system, however, may unfortunately
require the imposition of Argentine-style measures – such as bank holidays
and capital controls – to prevent a disorderly fallout.”*

Roubini correctly points out that defaulting would free the Greeks from the
burden of servicing a ludicrously large debt stock. But can an ‘orderly’
default be achieved without the contagion of default spreading to other weak
Eurozone capitalist states and generating a new economic slump in Europe and
beyond?

Greece is not Argentina in 2001.  Argentina could default and devalue its
currency with no risk of contagion for capitalist Brazil or Uruguay or
Chile.  But this time is different.  If Greece defaults, the people of
Portugal and Ireland are going to ask why should they go on paying back huge
debts to the banks when Greece has negotiated a write-off.  They would want
the burden lifted too.  Also the people of Spain and Italy, now subject to
new draconian taxes and cuts in order to keep bond markets happier about
their own sovereign debts, may ask the same.  And that is what really
worries the bond holders: the banks , pension funds, insurance companies and
hedge funds.  The pressure will move to Italy and Spain and bond investors
will demand even higher rates of interest to lend more money.  Record rates
will make it impossible for these governments to control and service their
debt too and the issue of default will then emerge again.  Contagion will
not be contained.

Banks across the region will be going bust if a Greek default is followed by
others.  That is why the ECB is so opposed to any default, even an ‘orderly’
one.  They would be faced with printing money to keep the banks going and
printing money (as they have started to do) to bail out the governments
too.  But printing money does not mean everybody gets paid with no pain.  It
will eventually mean a massive rise in inflation at a time when real
economic growth is low and may even start to contract.  Dreaded stagflation
would reappear in Europe.

And if the British and American ruling classes think they can sit back and
smirk at the Continentals, they would be wrong.  Their banks too would be
caught up in the impact of the default.  Also, if Europe slips into a new
slump, it would drag down their already weak capitalist economies too.
Indeed, they are well aware of this – which is why US treasury secretary Tim
Geithner made a special visit to the EU finance ministers’ meeting in Poland
last weekend to suggest that the ECB do just what it does not want to do –
print money to bail out everybody!

Roubini argues not only for an orderly default as the way out for the Greeks
and European capitalism.  He also reckons that Greeks should leave the euro
so they can devalue their currency to become ‘competitive’ in world
markets.  In other words, by reverting to the New Drachma at a much lower
value relative to the euro, the Greek capitalists can steal a march on their
former EMU friends and sell their goods cheaper.

Now I’m sure that there is no sympathy among readers of this blog or among
most observers for German or Dutch or Finnish capitalists who might be
undercut in the few sectors that Greek capitalists might have an advantage
over them.  So in that sense, leaving the euro and devaluing a new currency
might be popular.  But it also might be popular with Portuguese or Irish
capitalists too.  Before long, leaving the euro may lose its advantage for
Greece.

At the same time, devaluing means that all the debts that Greek households
have in euros would have to be devalued too or people would be destitute.
And Greek businesses that have borrowed in euros would face bankruptcy
because now revenues would be in cheap drachmas.  There would be a run on
the banks to get euros out and send them abroad, if the rich have their
way.  So the banks would have to be nationalised, deposits guaranteed and
capital controls put on to stop the rich and Greek big businesses taking
their euros abroad.  In other words, an alternative policy could not stop at
default and devaluation; it would have to move onto deeper measures of
public control and planning if it were to work for the Greek people.

Costas Lapavitsas, a socialist economist, has joined the call for default
and devaluation in the Guardian newspaper (
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/sep/19/greece-must-default-and-quit-euro).
Lapavitsas recognises that default and devaluation is not enough but he
argues that it is the best way out.  “*A progressive government would take
several decisive steps: switch to a new drachma quickly; nationalise the
banks; and impose capital controls. There would need to be administrative
measures to ensure supplies of oil, food and medicine, along with income and
wealth redistribution to support the poorest. Recovery should start in a few
months, spurred by devaluation that would allow industry to increase exports
and recapture the domestic market. If progressive forces showed sufficient
will, it would then be possible to transform the economy deeply, changing
the balance of power in favour of working people.*

But even he seems to emphasise devaluation as a cure more than public
control and planning. This blog has outlined in more detail what policies
need to be adopted by Eurozone governments to resolve this crisis and
restore living standards to those that are suffering under the heel of the
Troika (see* An alternative programme for Europe,* 11 September 2011).  The
answer is not so much devaluation which is a Keynesian way of putting the
burden of the crisis onto the people of other countries,  Such ‘beggar thy
neighbour’ policies will soon to lead to copycats.  The need is for more
investment and employment to grow the Greek economy.  That means state-owned
banks and investment in a social plan.  Maybe such policies would lead to
the Greeks being thrown out of the euro anyway.  But then it would not be
seen as a policy of nationalism, but an act of punishment by the ruling
groups and governments of the Eurozone.


On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 12:21 PM, robert mckee <[email protected]> wrote:

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