Posted by nytimes.com/
The new Greek bailout deal
agreed to Tuesday by euro zone finance ministers and the International
Monetary Fund is a clear improvement over earlier deals. It recognizes
that Greece’s current and projected ratios of debt to output are
unsustainable. It prescribes useful steps to lower that ratio, including
lower interest rates on loans from Greece’s European partners, longer
bond maturities and a plan for Athens to buy back and retire some of its
heavily discounted bonds.
Regrettably, it excludes more effective tools, like actual debt
write-downs, which Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, finds
politically unpalatable. And in deference to Ms. Merkel, the deal
postpones some of the promised relief until after German elections next
September.
But its biggest mistake is conditioning relief on maintaining fiscal
austerity. Greece’s only hope for long-term solvency is through
aggressive measures to revive economic growth. These could include
public investment in modernizing ports and infrastructure, tax cuts to
encourage export industries, and better public education. Done right,
such measures would more than pay for themselves by improving Greece’s
competitiveness in global and European markets. The bailout deal should
keep Greece financially solvent for the next few months, but the price
could prove too much for Greece’s economy and society to bear. Beginning
in 2016, Greece will be committed to extracting a budgetary surplus
(excluding interest payments) from a shrinking economy. And it is
expected to reduce debt-to-output ratios while output continues to fall.
Greece’s output is now almost 25 percent lower than it was in 2008. This year alone it will be down 6.4 percent.
Next year, factoring in the new package of tax increases and spending
cuts approved by the Greek Parliament last month at European insistence,
it is expected to fall even further. That means less business and less
personal income to pay taxes. Unemployment is now over 25 percent.
Health benefits for the long-term unemployed have already been cut. So
have pensions for the elderly and wages for those still working.
Greece’s prime minister, Antonis Samaras, hailed this week’s debt agreement
as the transformation of “endless austerity” into a program that “will
lead to growth.” Unfortunately, it promises nothing of the kind, and Mr.
Samaras’s fragile coalition shows signs of fracturing under the
economic strain. It might not even be able to stagger on until the
German election next year. If it falls, Greece could be headed for
default and exit from the euro. That catastrophe can still be avoided —
but only if Ms. Merkel decides to put the survival of Greece and the
future of the European Union ahead of her own electoral calculations.
No comments:
Post a Comment