Posts tagged ‘Greece’

Fierce troika attack on Greek labour costs

Devaluation was invariably the path to survival for weaker European economies in the days before the euro. But when devaluation is no longer an option, there is evidently no choice for failing economies but to squeeze public spending and slash labour costs in the hope of paying off debt and restoring competitiveness.

A striking aspect of the Greek case is the attack by the troika of ECB, IMF and European Commission on wages and non-wage costs in Greece’s private sector. This also means an attack on Greek trade unions, which have always been extremely powerful players. I well recall a meeting with the CEO of a major firm in Athens which was having trouble with Brussels, and being told that the union chief had his office just down the corridor. That was a big problem for the client!

The negotiations over recent weeks have shown just how tough is the new reality. The Athens talks have demonstrated a fierce determination by the troika to force a transformation in the Greek economy.

The deal now approved by Athens imposes a range of measures which, according to Athens News  includes cutting the minimum wage by 22 per cent plus a further 10 per cent for young workers, a freeze in basic wages until 2015, a reduction in pension provisions (still to be finalised), lower social contributions and  elimination of the 13th and 14th months’ salary to which private sector workers are entitled. A further reduction of 15,000 people in state employment will be required this year as part of a longer term cut of 150,000 and another €300m of budget cuts as yet unspecified. The scope of the troika’s demands will not be lost on other peripheral eurozone countries.

The troika negotiators are taking  nothing on trust. Greece’s main political parties have been obliged to commit themselves to the deal as a condition of receiving the €130bn bailout in advance of April elections.  Antonis Samaras, who leads the New Democracy party, was holding out, but all the main parties have now signed. Finance minister Evangelos Venizelos headed to Brussels today in the hope of striking an agreement with the eurogroup.

The German idea of putting a Brussels-based manager in charge of the Greek economy may have been a humiliation too far for Greek sensitivities, but the requirement to channel bail-out funds into an escrow account to ensure that interest on the loans will be paid on time would effectively amount to external control of budget management.

When is a default not a default? When Greece keeps the euro, I suppose. After difficult negotiations with the banks and others there does appear to be agreement on the haircut for private sector debt, with the writing off of 70 per cent of the face value of Greek bonds and an interest rate of 3.5 per cent on replacement paper.  As part of the final agreement it seems that ECB president Mario Draghi has said that the ECB will agree to forego the face value of the €40bn of bonds which it acquired at a knock-down price last year, knocking a further €10bn or so off the Greek debt mountain.

So the price to be paid for Greece to remain in the eurozone is high indeed.  There is no doubting the suffering faced by the Greek people. The bitter truth is that the alternative of all-out default and quitting the euro could be even worse. The test will be whether a real reduction in labour costs and a freeing-up of the economy will provide sufficient stimulus for Greece to climb out of the abyss.

An accountant friend of mine has proposed a simple solution to the crisis: Give all we other Europeans a voucher for two weeks’ holiday in Greece. That should get the Greek economy moving again!

February 9, 2012 at 3:25 pm 1 comment

When Europe sneezes, will the world catch pneumonia?

Since the eurozone crisis first erupted three years ago it has largely been seen as Europe’s problem. It has now become a global emergency.

This crisis is “scaring the world” says President Obama, whose Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner visited Europe twice in a week to meet European finance ministers and who has demanded speedy action in the strongest language, warning of “cascading default, bank runs and catastrophic risk”. Such US criticism looks a bit rich in the wake of the great American budget row, but it seems that when Europe sneezes, the whole world may catch pneumonia.

The G-20 has been mobilised to put co-ordinated pressure on the Europeans, while the International Monetary Fund is becoming a central player in a desperate campaign to avert global recession. The question is whether the IMF has the firepower to meet the challenge. In the few short weeks leading up to the G-20 summit in Cannes on November 3-4 an action programme must be devised to instil new confidence into the global economy and restore faith in the markets. Six weeks to save the euro, says UK finance minister George Osborne. Six weeks to save the world economy, some say.

A whole raft of ideas is in the air. One is to gear up the €440 billion EFSF by borrowing against it, so creating a fund of €2 trillion; another is a 50 per cent haircut of Greek bonds, allowing default by any other name but keeping Greece in the eurozone, with new funds provided to the banks by the ECB to strengthen their balance sheets. These are all variations on the piecemeal measures already adopted, too little and too late, by Europe.

Angela Merkel stresses the need for a step-by-step approach – or perhaps day-by-day would be more appropriate. She doesn’t want to frighten the horses in advance of Thursday’s meeting of the Bundestag, which will vote on the European Financial Stability Facility, so she does not welcome talk of Greek default or the creation of eurobonds.

The markets must not be allowed to dictate policy, she says, and she reassured Greek prime minister Papandreou of Germany’s support on this week’s visit to Berlin. The crisis was a debt crisis, she said, not a euro crisis.

It does look as if the German Chancellor will win the vote on Thursday with opposition support, but whether she can take her coalition partners with her is another matter. There is particular concern among FDP members over the possible expansion of the stability fund.

Ratification of the fund has other hurdles to overcome, but the Slovenian parliament has now given its approval. There follows Wednesday’s vote in the Finnish parliament, which has been negotiating  “collateral” with Greece as a condition of supporting the bail-out plan, and Slovakia, voting on October 11, which hates the idea of bailing out a wealthier neighbour, but is nonetheless likely to give its approval. Tuesday’s approval by the Greek parliament of a new property tax should underpin support in these countries.

Approval of the EFSF will no doubt help to soothe the markets in the short term, but it now seems clear that global support will be needed to restore long-term stability to global markets and head off recession. This will inevitably involve China, India and other developing economies,  marking a further shift of economic power across the world.

Michael Berendt

September 28, 2011 at 3:51 pm Leave a comment


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