The
Guardian, Wednesday 16 May 2012
The British government is making urgent preparations to cope with the
fallout of a possible Greek exit from the single currency, after the governor
of the Bank of England , Sir
Mervyn King, warned that Europe
was "tearing itself apart".
Reports from Athens that massive sums of
money were being spirited out of the country intensified concern in London about the impact of a splintering of the eurozone
on a UK
economy that is stuck in double-dip recession. One estimate put the cost to
the eurozone of Greece
making a disorderly exit from the currency at $1tn, 5% of output.
Officials in the United
States are also nervously watching the
growing crisis: Barack Obama on Wednesday described it as a
"headwind" that could threaten the fragile American recovery.
In a speech in Manchester before flying to the United States for a summit
of G8 leaders, the British prime minister, David Cameron, will say the eurozone
"either has to make up or it is looking at a potential breakup",
adding that the choice for Europe's leaders cannot be long delayed.
"Either Europe has a committed,
stable, successful eurozone with an effective firewall, well capitalised and
regulated banks, a system of fiscal burden sharing, and supportive monetary
policy across the eurozone, or we are in uncharted territory which carries huge
risks for everybody.
"Whichever path is chosen, I am prepared to do whatever is
necessary to protect this country and secure our economy and financial system."
Officials from the Bank, the Treasury and the Financial Services Authority
are drawing up plans in the expectation that a Greek departure from monetary
union – increasingly seen as inevitable by financial markets – could be as
damaging to the global economy as the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September
2008.
With a second election in Greece
called for 17 June, King dropped a strong hint that the Bank would take fresh
steps to stimulate growth if policymakers in Europe
failed to deal with the sovereign debt crisis.
"We have been through a big global financial crisis, the biggest
downturn in world output since the 1930s, the biggest banking crisis in this
country's history, the biggest fiscal deficit in our peacetime history and our
biggest trading partner, the euro
area, is tearing itself apart without any obvious solution," he said.
Doug McWilliams, of the Centre for Economic and Business Research, said a
planned breakup of the single currency would cost 2% of eurozone GDP ($300bn)
but a disorderly collapse would result in a 5% drop in output, a $1tn loss.
"The end of the euro in its current form is a certainty," he added.
Alistair Darling, who was Chancellor of the Exchequer under the former
Labour administration, said: "This has the seeds of something disastrous.
It is madness. If it spreads to bigger countries, this could be really
disastrous for Europe . It could consign us to
years of stagnation."
Capital flight from Greece
has increased since it became clear that a coalition government could not be
formed after the election earlier this month. The Greek president, Karolos
Papoulias, said citizens were withdrawing their money amid "great fear
that could develop into panic" at the risk of a debt default and exit from
the euro area, according to minutes of their meetings posted on the
presidency's website. In little more than a week following the election on 6
May, €3bn was withdrawn from bank accounts. The central bank reported that
€800m was taken out in a single day earlier this week.
The head of the International Institute of Finance banking lobby, Charles
Dallara, said money was leaving Greece
at a growing pace due to political uncertainty. "There has been a pickup
of deposit flight from Greece ,
but I think that is stabilisable once you get a new government in place, if
that government reaffirms its intention to remain in the eurozone." The
damage to the rest of Europe if Greece
were to leave the euro would be "somewhere between catastrophic and
armageddon", he said.
The Spanish prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, told parliament that his country
faced trouble financing itself as borrowing costs shoot up to
"astronomic" levels. The Irish finance minister, Michael Noonan, said
Dublin 's plan
to return to capital markets in late 2013 might not be achievable because of
the uncertainty.
The first meeting between French president François Hollande and German
chancellor Angela Merkel helped to calm nerves in the markets at one stage,
with suggestions that Berlin might be amenable
to initiatives to boost growth in Greece and the other
austerity-stricken nations of the eurozone.
But the jittery mood was underlined by a fall in European shares and the
single currency late in the day amid reports that the European Central Bank was
cutting off its funding lifeline to Greek banks that had failed to amass enough
capital to protect them from future losses.
The ECB later said it expected the Greek central bank to use part of the
€130bn bailout from the EU and IMF to ensure that the country's banks were
safeguarded from collapse, and that they would receive additional help from Frankfurt only once this had happened. Already delayed by
the political uncertainty in Greece ,
€18bn is now expected to be released to recapitalise the banks.
Sony Kapoor, of the Brussels-based Re-Define thinktank, said: "The
high-stakes game of chicken between Greek and other EU politicians must end
now. Those saying that a Greek exit from the eurozone will not be a big deal
either don't know what they are talking about, or have some ulterior motives.
The social, political and economic damage to the EU from a Greek exit is
potentially incalculable."
At the G8 summit, which starts on Friday, Obama will press Merkel to lean more towards a growth package for Europe,
instead of pressing so hard for the austerity measures that were rejected by
Greek voters.
But foreign affairs analysts said that Obama's leverage with the European
leaders is minimal. Although the US
has the economic muscle to help Europe out of
its mess, the Obama administration has taken the strategic decision not to
become involved directly.
Instead, Obama is to use the Camp David
summit for some quiet diplomacy, hoping to sway Merkel to endorse some
immediate actions to help growth.
King, speaking at the publication of the Bank of England's quarterly
inflation report, said growth in Britain was weaker and inflation
higher than Threadneedle Street
had expected three months ago. It would take until 2014 for output to return to
where it was in 2008, when Britain 's
deepest post-war recession began.
"What is so depressing about it is that this is a rerun of the debates
in 2007/08 – these are not liquidity problems, they are solvency
problems," King said. "Imbalances between countries in the euro area
have created creditors and debtors and at some point the credit losses will
need to be recognised and absorbed and shared around," he said.
"Until that is done, there will not be a resolution. That is why just
kicking the can down the road is not an answer. The European Central Bank has
performed heroically in trying to buy time but that time hasn't been used to
put in place fundamental underlying solutions."
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