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This is an archive article published on April 10, 2010
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Opinion A Greek tragedy

EU membership only compounds Greece’s problems....

April 10, 2010 02:26 AM IST First published on: Apr 10, 2010 at 02:26 AM IST

The debt crisis in Greece is approaching the point of no return. As prospects for a rescue plan seem to be fading,largely thanks to German obduracy,nervous investors have driven interest rates on Greek government bonds sky-high,sharply raising the country’s borrowing costs. This will push Greece even deeper into debt,further undermining

confidence. At this point it’s hard to see how the nation can escape from this death spiral into default.

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Yes,Greece is paying the price for past fiscal irresponsibility. Yet that’s by no means the whole story. The Greek tragedy also illustrates the extreme danger posed by a deflationary monetary policy. The key thing to understand about Greece’s predicament is that it’s not just a matter of excessive debt. Greece’s public debt,at 113 per cent of GDP,is indeed high,but other countries have dealt with similar levels of debt without crisis. For example,in 1946,the United States,having just emerged from World War II,had federal debt equal to 122 per cent of GDP. Yet investors were relaxed,and rightly so: Over the next decade the ratio of US debt to GDP was cut nearly in half. And debt as a percentage of GDP continued to fall in the decades that followed,hitting a low of 33 per cent in 1981.

So how did the US government manage to pay off its wartime debt? Actually,it didn’t. At the end of 1946,the federal government owed $ 271 billion; by the end of 1956 that figure had risen slightly,to $ 274 billion. The ratio of debt to GDP fell not because debt went down,but because GDP went up,roughly doubling in dollar terms over the course of a decade. The rise in GDP in dollar terms was almost equally the result of economic growth and inflation,with both real GDP and the overall level of prices rising about 40 per cent from 1946 to 1956.

Unfortunately,Greece can’t expect a similar performance.

Why? Because of the euro. Until recently,being a member of the euro zone seemed like a good thing for Greece,bringing with it cheap loans and large inflows of capital. But those capital inflows also led to inflation — and when the music stopped,Greece found itself with costs and prices way out of line with Europe’s big economies. Over time,Greek prices will have to come back down. And that means that unlike postwar America,which inflated away part of its debt,Greece will see its debt burden worsened by deflation.

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That’s not all. Deflation is a painful process,which invariably takes a toll on growth and employment. So Greece won’t grow its way out of debt. On the contrary,it will have to deal with its debt in the face of an economy that’s stagnant at best. So the only way Greece could tame its debt problem would be with savage spending cuts and tax increases,measures that would themselves worsen the unemployment rate. No wonder,then,that bond markets are losing confidence,and pushing the situation to the brink.

What can be done? The hope was that other European countries would strike a deal,guaranteeing Greek debt in return for a commitment to harsh fiscal austerity. That might have worked. But without German support,such a deal won’t happen.

Greece could alleviate some of its problems by leaving the euro,and devaluing. But it’s hard to see how Greece could do that without triggering a catastrophic run on its banking system. Indeed,worried depositors have already begun pulling cash out of Greek banks. There are no good answers here —

actually,no non-terrible answers.

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