Greek 'Aid' Is Really Enhanced Vendor Financing and Foreign Bank Bailouts
“They don’t want to kill us [the Greek people] but keep us down on our knees so we can keep paying them indefinitely.”
Eva Kyriadou
The similarity to the Icelandic situation is striking. Greece must deal with the problem of decoupling from the Euro, but other than that the scenario seems fairly straightforward.
Greece needs to assert their independence, and have the will to make it 'stick.'
In the manner of 'mailing in their keys' on an underwater home and the burden of an outsized dodgy loan, the Greek people should consider mailing their eurozone membership back to the ECB and their friends in the Banks and Wall Street hedge funds c/o Berlin, and suggest that the conquest of their country might have to proceed by more conventional and overt means if they want to take the country's sovereign assets and income.
An investigation of all the debt deals would be a first rate idea, with plenty of public disclosure of the corruption and cronysim that was involved between public officials and the banks. PARIS — Its membership in the euro currency union hanging in the balance, Greece continues to receive billions of euros in emergency assistance from a so-called troika of lenders overseeing its bailout. But almost none of the money is going to the Greek government to pay for vital public services. Instead, it is flowing directly back into the troika’s pockets.
The European bailout of 130 billion euros ($163.4 billion) that was
supposed to buy time for Greece is mainly servicing only the interest on
the country’s debt — while the Greek economy continues to struggle.
If that seems to make little sense economically, it has a certain logic
in the politics of euro-finance. After all, the money dispensed by the
troika — the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund
and the European Commission — comes from European taxpayers, many of
whom are increasingly wary of the political disarray that has afflicted
Athens and clouded the future of the euro zone.
As they pay themselves, though, the troika members are also withholding
other funds intended to keep the Greek government in operation.
Last week, the Athens office that tracks revenue said Greece could run
out of money by July. If so, Greece could default on its debts — except
those due to the central bank, the monetary fund and the European Union.
“Greece will not default on the troika because the troika is paying
themselves,” said Thomas Mayer, a senior adviser at Deutsche Bank in
Frankfurt.
In an elaborate payment system that began after the May 6 election that
brought down the Greek government and is meant to ensure that the Greeks
do not touch the cash, the big three creditors are now wiring bailout
payments to an escrow account in Greece. There the money sits for two or
three days — before much of it is sent back to the troika as interest
payments on the Greek bonds that Europe accepted under terms of the
bailout deal struck in February.
About three-quarters of Greece’s debt, or $229 billion, is now
effectively owned by one of the three troika members, according to
estimates by the investment bank UBS.
The central bank, in particular, is eager to be paid back, said Mr. Mayer, who has followed the cash.
To help calm volatile financial markets, it bought billions of euros in
Greek bonds that come due monthly. “It’s why they want to get paid back
every month now,” he said. “The E.C.B. bought at a high price and now
insists on being paid in full.”
Some people close to the situation say the troika is also trying to put
financial pressure on Greece to do what it can to collect tax revenue
from an increasingly devastated economy.
The managing director of the I.M.F., Christine Lagarde, prompted a furor
in Greece over the weekend when she chastised Greeks for not paying
taxes, in an interview with The Guardian.
A Greek government adviser who spoke on the condition of anonymity, for
fear of alienating the European lenders, said of the troika: “They made
sure that the sum for domestic spending is kept small enough to force
Greece to dramatically raise its own revenues.”
On its face, the situation seems absurd. The European authorities are
effectively lending Greece money so Greece can repay the money it
borrowed from them.
“You send the money, you call it a ‘loan’ — you get it back and call it an ‘interest rate,’ ” said Stephane Deo, global head of asset allocation
in London for UBS. Mr. Deo said such arrangements were common in
situations where governments were in danger of defaulting on their
debts.
That is because governments do not go bankrupt in the same way that
companies do; creditors cannot break them up and sell the assets to
recover some of their money. So creditors have an incentive to ensure
that distressed governments continue to repay their debts, even if it
means lending them the money.
Since May 2010, Greece has been sent about $177 billion in European
taxpayer money to keep the country afloat and ward off a bigger crisis
that might threaten the entire currency union. Of that amount, a full
two-thirds has gone to pay off bondholders and the troika.
Only a third has been earmarked to finance government operations, with
only a tiny sliver spent on stimulus projects for the anemic economy.
This circular lending is all about risk management. After all, Greece
this year negotiated a debt deal in which banks that held its bonds got
only about half of their money back.
The troika wants to ensure the same does not happen to its members and
the taxpayers. European officials have also pointed to Greece’s track
record on finances, including manipulating its budget numbers to qualify
to join the euro union in 2001, and government corruption since then.
Another recent development has rung alarm bells. Last month the troika
sent Greece $31 billion to help shore up its banks.
On Tuesday, the caretaker Greek government dispensed $23 billion of it
to the banks. But some Greek officials have suggested tapping the
remainder to keep the government running past June, should the troika
continue to wield a tight fist.
The European Central Bank became one of Greece’s biggest creditors after
it started buying debt from troubled euro zone countries in 2010 to
help stabilize prices. The bank does not disclose how much Greek debt it
bought, but estimates are from $44 billion to $69 billion.
Greek bonds are a profitable investment for the bank as long as Greece
continues to make interest payments. The bank exempted itself from the
debt restructuring deal. And Greek bonds were already trading at a big
discount when the central bank started buying them. As a result, the
bank is earning an effective interest rate of 10 percent or so, Mr. Deo
estimated.
But he added that it was also a risky trade. If Greece defaulted,
European taxpayers might ultimately have to pour new money into the
bank’s capital reserves.
The European Union’s bailout fund, the European Financial Stability
Facility, also became a major Greek creditor as a result of the
debt-reduction deal that Greece negotiated with bondholders. All told
its contribution amounted to about $88 billion.
However harsh the payback terms might seem, the European authorities
have a strong interest in avoiding the even higher costs that would
result if Greece left the euro zone or defaulted completely on its debt.
As early as next year, according to optimistic estimates, Greece could
reach the point where tax receipts exceed government operating expenses.
At that point, a populist government might be tempted to stop making
debt payments altogether. If so, it might then take its chances on its
own, outside the euro zone without the burden of interest payments.
To help leaders in Greece resist that temptation, the troika’s reasoning
goes, it is better to help them service the debt immediately.
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