An alternate view on Greece currency crisis and how Greece should think differently.
Greece
should be saying “Screw Eurozone, It’s all over” akin to what Lady Gaga tweeted
after her concert in Delhi
(Screw Hollywood, its all Bollywood). Greece is at the threshold of a
major economic disaster. Not that a sovereign default will happen for the first
time in the world, but it’s the complexity of a single currency union and the
resultant lack of consensus that is making the markets and investors nervous. Greece is
caught between a rock and a hard place. It needs help from Eurozone partners to
evade sovereign default and keep its credit lines open. At the same time the
conditions set forth by Eurozone are pushing its economy further downhill in
terms of competitiveness and long term growth and stability.
Greece
at the moment looks like any other common person who has incurred more debt than
he or she can repay considering his or her current income and assets. A default is thus very
likely. Greece
is looking towards its partners to bail it out of this situation by lending
money; much like any other common man would do in such a situation. However, the problem
is that its partners are enforcing stiff conditions on Greece, in terms of controlled
spending, cut in jobs and continuous monitoring on measurable basis of austerity measures to help it
out of this mess. Once Greece accepts the austerity measures and cut spending and jobs, its growth will further fall and
its ability to repay the debt will diminish. A bailout from partners would no
doubt avoid a global economic catastrophe and give Greece relief in the short and
medium term. But it would be stressed again when the loans from its partners
become due.
An alternate, which Greece should be considering at this stage is
a full blown sovereign default. It sound outrageous and unethically in the
first place, but if I am Greece
this sound like a long term solution to my problems of low growth, unemployment
and balance of payment situation. Lets consider what will happen if Greece goes into
a full blown sovereign default. If Greece defaults, outside the
preview of what is being proposed by Eurozone, it would be forced to exit Euro and there may be a bank run on its banks and financial institutions. Its currency
will devalue and local businesses will face bankruptcy. It will also import
high inflation as currently Greece
is a net importer.
But on the other side because of a devalued currency its
competitiveness will increase and it will slowly start to be an attractive market
for cheap manufacturing in the Eurozone. Its long term prospects, if seen from a
10-15 years perspective, may be healthier than if it sticks to the austerity
conditions as a precondition to staying inside the Eurozone. It can also consider setting up preferential zones for
emerging market companies to set up businesses and provide easy and cheap
access to labor and infrastructure. Since the emerging market currency would
buy more of Greece devalued
currency, it would indeed be attractive to set up business in Greece.
Greece
needs to evaluate the pros of cons of being in the Euro currency versus an exit
from Euro and having its own currency. At this stage the long term prospects
needs to be balanced with the immediate and medium term prospects and
consequences. A short sighted vision at this stage might lead to a permanent
defect which would be difficult to correct later.
No doubt a sovereign default would wreck havoc on a global
scale. But then some other countries (particularly Thailand
and Argentina)
have been in similar circumstances and they have only come out stronger thanks
to their independent currency and fiscal/ monetary policy. Greece should take a cue from India too. In
1991 India
was at the verge of a sovereign default. But devaluation of its currency coupled with structural reforms turned the table and today India is one of the more stable and
better managed countries embarking on a high growth trajectory.
As Lady Gaga says, Screw Hollywood, it’s all Bollywood; Greece too
should be saying Screw Eurozone, it’s all over.
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