1 / 31

The truth about Greek debt Why it is an European problem ?

The truth about Greek debt Why it is an European problem ?. With Abstracts of the preliminary report of the Commission of the Greek Parliament for the Truth on the Public Debt Thanos Contargyris ( thanos@dialogos.net ) Member of the Commission Founding Member of.

bellamym
Download Presentation

The truth about Greek debt Why it is an European problem ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The truth about Greek debt Why it is an European problem? With Abstracts of the preliminary report of the Commission of the Greek Parliament for the Truth on the Public Debt Thanos Contargyris ( thanos@dialogos.net ) Member of the Commission Founding Member of % ΑΤΤΑC HELLAS (GREECE) Presentation for meeting in Berlin February 2016

  2. DEBT EXISTS EVERYWHERE… In Germany as much as in Greece! Debt as % of GDPof GDP in2012

  3. DEBT OF HOUSEHOLDS Loans instead wage increases! Loans based on real estate trends… Which, like in US in 2007can reverse, and provoke sub-primes risks and crisis Consequence: losses of pensions funds and banks Pressure on wages  Part of wages in % of added value 1976-2011

  4. DEBTS OF BANKS Loans to play casino! Deregulation started when the distinction – imposed by Roosevelt in 1929 – between banks of deposits and banks of investment has been abolished. New technologies allowed an acceleration of transactions while the creation of new financial instruments, out of any control, has also grown (titration of loans, derivatives, CDS,…): the over-exposure to risky debts without any coverage increased. The opposition to the introduction of financial transaction taxes, which could have attenuated these phenomena, allowed an acceleration of these trends: they explain 2007 crisis. The worse of all that is that states are asked to intervene and accept new debts to save the banks… Deregulation

  5. PUBLIC DEBTS Loans instead of taxes! This trend is very strong in Eurozone due to very attractive low interest rates. But governments have put themselves in the hands of banks and markets by transferring to banks the exclusive right to get loans from ECB allowing them to negotiate loans at a higher rate with governments.Not only that: they also ask to be bailed-out when they make losses! Debt of France = cumulated bank benefits paid since 1974 Fiscal competition  Evolution of taxes on benefits in Eurozone 1995 - 2011

  6. THE RESULT: PUBLIC DEBT HAS INCREASED EVERYWHERE SINCE 2007 CRISIS… Nobody respects the golden rule of 60% Συνολικό Χρέος σε % του ΑΕΠ το 2012

  7. WHY THE GREEK PUBLIC DEBT WAS HIGH? 66% of the Greek public debt increase from 1980 to 2007 was due to the accumulated interests (snow-ball effect) paid to private banks Public deficits represent a total increase of debt/GDP ratio of only 28,3% of GDP. If military expenses had been similar to those of the average of EU countries the public deficits would have been eliminated and the debt/GDP ratio reduced at <80%

  8. The Greek deficits were exclusively due to excessive military expenses: > 30% of GDP (85/240)and 28% of debt (85/300) of 2012 An excess of military expenses Due to some very contestable military imports (from FR, DE, UK, US...) Justified for the defense of very sensitive European borders Cumulatedexcess of military expenses of Greece compared to EZ countries Only for 1990-2012 period (billions € at 2010 prices) Source: Eurostat (%GDP in EZ and GR) AMECO (GDP at 2010 levels in Billion €) A big part of it is explained by Cumulated Military Imports of Greece since 1980 (Millions of $ at 2010 prices) Source : SIPRI database (imports) Source AMECO (GDP prices 2010 - 1990)

  9. Other structural causes of Greek debt Structural problems of Greek public finances Expenses lightly over EZ average, A problem of COLLECTION of taxes lower after correction of excessive & employers’ social contributions military expenses and bad spending - high tolerance for those not paying their taxes (clientelism, corruption, bureaucracy, low services) - lower taxation and parallel economy at 30% Badly addressed (wage & social cuts only) Almost not addressed until 2015 (flat tax increases) Source Eurostat – Commission for the Truth on Public Debt of Greece

  10. Other structural causes of Greek crisis External unbalances accentuated by an excessive increase of consumption loans offered by European banks after 2004 Balance of goods and services (in billion euros) Source: Bank of Greece Consumption loans/ Loans of European banks (in Billion euros) Source : Bank of Greece

  11. Conjectural origins of the Greek crisis 1/2 A sudden sharp reduction of high growth rates due to 2007 crisis provokes excessive public deficits (higher than GDP growth rates)… Compared growth rates of GDP (in current prices – in %) Source: OCDE Annual deficit (% GDP) Growth rates (% GDP) Source : Eurostat

  12. Conjectural origins of the Greek crisis 2/2 The sudden reduction of GDP growth and the increase of deficits provoked a sharp increase of debt from 100% to 125% of GDP from 2007 to 2009 Debt / GDP and growth of GDP ratios from 2000 to 2011 Sources: Eurostat and IMF

  13. Market reaction to Greek (and EU) debt crisis: judges EU reactions as being too weak, too late Speculation on CDS and yields and collapse of the value of Greek bonds Source: Source: REUTERS Bloomberg and IMF staff calculation Meanwhile Greek bonds were sold in secondary market between 75% and 85% of their value. ECB bought part of them at this price to avoid a further collapse…which would have increased the losses of the banks detaining them.

  14. How EU reacted? 1. EU purchased time to allow EU banks to smoothly get rid of Greek loans… The reduction of the excessive exposure to Greek loans of the banking sector in 2010 and 2011 (mostly FR & DE banks) Exposure to risk in Greece of foreign banks Exposure of foreign banks to risks in PIGS Source: BRI Source: Bank for Transnational Settlements

  15. 2. EU gave loans to Greece to pay back its debt to banks at 100% of its value EU provided loans to Greece to allow banks to be reimbursed at 100% for their loans to Greek public sector and minimise their losses. The bail-out of Greece was a bail-out of banks with EU public funds.

  16. …3. EU decided very late a very ineffective debt reduction (PSI) of apparently 100 billion (33%) in fact 21 (7%) In 2012 - 2013 After having passed 100 billion in public hands A 100 billion reduction on remaining 200 billion of which: About 150 had passed in Greek Hands 117 of Greek Banks 58 fully recapitalised gain 0 33 of Greek Public bodies (mainly Pension Funds)16,5 lost  gain 2 About 50 remained in Private Foreign hands Potential debt reduction 25 • Sweeteners offered • - Those refusing (opt outs) • NET DEBT REDUCTION < 20 billion

  17. 4. EU imposed hard austerity to Greece A) A big reduction of public expenses b) Internal devaluation measures: reduction of Minimal Wages by 22% (33% for young people), cancellation of all collective conventions…

  18. The effects of the treatment Some apparently positive and necessary results

  19. But with unexpected collateral effects A killing treatment… Social disaster: • Unemployment at 26% and more than 50% for young people  they go abroad • Available average income reduced by 30% • Poverty at more than 30% • Increase of all forms of precarious jobs • Lowering of pensions • Public services (health, education) dismantled • >80.000 enterprises closed Political effects: • PASOK, main responsible of the choices, drops from 44% in 2009 to 5% • SYRIZA, grows from 4,6% in 2009 to 36% • Conservatives from 40% to less than 30% • Extreme right from 5% to 7% Victory of SYRIZA in January 2015. Referendum against austerity at 62%....

  20. Where we are after 5 years? The debt instead of decreasing became completely unsustainable IMF (14/7/2015) - Debt would peak at close to 200 percent of GDP in the next two years. By 2022, debt projected to be at 170 percent of GDP. Gross financing needs well above the 15 percent of GDP threshold deemed safe and continue rising in the long term. EC (10/7/2015) - Debt-to-GDP ratio expected to reach 165% in 2020, 150% in 2022 & 111% in 2030 in the baseline scenario. The respective debt/GDP ratios in the adverse scenario are: 187% in 2020, 176% in 2022 and 142% in 2030

  21. Current status of Greece Provisional conclusion • Greece is not out of the crisis: Greeks live the effects of a default (capital controls, austerity, poverty…) without any of its benefits (cancellation of debt, recovery of sovereignty) • The renegotiation of Greek debt is vital: for allowing that a lot of concessions have been done since July. • Greece is in the situation of Germany in 1919 and 1952 • If the solution of Versailles is imposed to Greece (pay all the debt), neither the default, nor the Grexit will be considered, soon, as threats, despite the risks implied for Greece and EU • If a solution more inspired by the London’s conference of 1953 prevails, it will recover more rapidly than expected with minimal risks for itself and its EU partners To prepare a strong negotiation two things are missing: • Debt Audit Commission preliminary report should be used better • A public debate on a parallel currency should open: it will clarify if Greeks can support attempts to get partially free of the constraints of ECB to negotiate their debt

  22. For Greece, what is at stake? A reasonable and fair deal implies from EU side A debt cut of at least 30% of the debt (100 b €) is needed An efficient and fair restructuration of Greek debt could be based on the acceptance that debt due to excessive military expenses cannot be paid by Greeks alone, neither the cost of bailing out other EU countries’ banks : they should be shared Additional (not alternative) measures could be: • Lowering interest rates to limit required surplus-surplus<2% • A -4 years?- moratorium of interests and reimbursements to allow Greek economy to recover and Greece to pay back • Private investments to reconstruct the destroyed Greek economy should be encouraged by different means But also (for solving other countries cases) it will be good to: • Consider an increase of wages in countries with high surplus instead of further revenues reductions in Greece

  23. For Greece, what is at stake? A reasonable and fair deal implies that Greece will then welcome, accept and endorse • Measures to make investments attractive in order to create new jobs, fight unemployment and refrain educated young people from leaving the country • Effective actions to fight fiscal fraud • Effective actions to eliminate corruption • Effective actions to eliminate bureaucracy - Make Greek rich people pay their share (levy tax on property?) • Effective actions to make public administration efficient • Effective actions to deliver better public services • An honest and transparent valorisation of public assets

  24. What about the current alternative? The risk of refusing a true and fair solution The current dominant scenario is that Greek debt will not be reduced. This implies that Greece will have, soon, with SYRIZA or, worse, later, with an extreme right government, to declare a default and leave the Eurozone and maybe the EU. Except the implied direct losses (impossibility of reimbursing of the biggest part of its debt) other consequences are: • Greece will not be able anymore to buy: a client lost… • Interests located outside EU will take the opportunity to take financial profits (by speculating against the euro), or, political profits by proposing new alliances to Greece compromising the geopolitical balance in a very sensitive region at a very sensitive moment • Other countries, if Greece is better off after that (and it could be after a period), could follow later

  25. The choice is: Versailles or London? The true challenge to be addressed An excessive debt is a sacrifice to the past condemning the future: it obliges a country to generate excessive surplus for a very long period; as this is impossible the result is that at the end its debt will never be paid back. Nobody will win! Germany has faced twice this situation in its history and has been faced by EU countries, including Greece, with two very different solutions with completely opposed consequences • For its debt of 1st World War: France claimed that it should pay all its debt - the treaty of Versailles – It lead to a big crisis, Hitler and the 2nd World War. A catastrophe for all! • For its debt of 2nd World War: US requested in 1953 and obtained (Treaty of London) a reduction of its debt by 50%. US, European lenders (including Greece) and Germany have known a long period of peace, prosperity and cooperation thanks to this decision.

  26. Proposals for a new consensus on public debts at EU level Public Debt audits should be conducted everywhere in EU • to respond to the obligation created by Regulation (EU) No. 472/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council on 21 May 2013 • to understand the causes of debt and correct them (overspending – insufficient taxation) • to understand what part is sustainable, under which conditions; after recalculating the costs required to face the challenges in front of us An European Conference on Public debts to agree & decide Common priorities to face, means required for them and fix the limit s of the maximum surplus for debt service at levels allowing to address them (1,5% of GDP) • Fix what is excessive debt (>120% of GDP) and haircut it • Redefine target levels (<100% of GDP) and give time to reach them • Freeze the part below target levels with low interest rates <2% • Stop refinancing bank sector ‘ errors with public funds – use FTT instead Rules and effective cooperation to stop public debts increase over the excessive level To ban fiscal and social competition as well as fiscal and social fraud and evasion within EU

  27. The choices we are facing (1/2) Pay for the Past (Fiscal Pacts, Debts) or get enough free of them to be able to face creatively the real challenges in front of us (ageing population, climate change, poverty, inequalities, decent jobs creation)?

  28. The choices we are facing (2/2) Austerity + Fiscal Competition Or Solidarity and Fiscal Convergence

  29. Quit, Rebuild EU or Rebuild consensus? What vision EU offers today? A EU which will blow up, under nationalist pressure? • Organised divergence – Exacerbated competition • Grexit? Brexit? Frexit? South against the North, or West against East? • End of the Euro, of Schengen.. – Back to closed borders An European empire with vassal states ? • Fight against any form of convergence or solidarity • Take over of the control of the resources of the South & East by the North & West? • Young people leaving the South & East to go North & West? • More production in the South or in the East, at low prices to re-localise productions currently delocalised outside EU? A democratic, social, federal, integrated, solider EU? • Policies of convergence and consensus democratically agreed • Reduced deficit & surplus and mutualisation of risks & opportunities As it is, EU, last months, evolves more to the first scenarios…

  30. Conclusion EU is in a deep crisis facing several simultaneous challenges: austerity, debts, refugees, terrorism, regain of nationalisms Greek case revealed a lot of terrific aspects of EU governance It should provoke a citizens’ debate at EU level in favor of another EU EU citizens should engage and impose this democratic debate • For re-establishing the rights of politics & democracy over the markets & technocracy • To allow Democracy to defend itself against Plutocracy • To re-establish the status of Collectivity and Society in all policy choices • To re-establish at national and European level key values such as social justice, solidarity, human rights, consensus and inclusive society From the collective answers, at EU level, the citizen will be able to deliver the choice on the future of EU will depend Is it time to blow EU up or/and to rebuilt it? Is it any hope left to rebuild a consensus in it?

  31. Thank you for your attention

More Related