Days
after the July 22 deal on a second bail-out package
for debt-strapped Greece, the full import of the package
is still being unravelled. There are two basic messages
that seem to be emerging. First, the banks, which
were initially seen as having been forced to take
a well-deserved hit for their lack of diligence as
lenders, have got away with a good deal. Second, as
a result, while European governments have staked a
lot of their money in the hope of saving the eurozone
and preventing another crisis, and so have governments
elsewhere through the involvement of the IMF, the
crisis has not been even partially addressed, but
merely postponed.
The second bail-out package is worth Euro 109 billion,
just a billion euros short of the 110 billion provided
in the first bail-out more than a year ago. According
to observers much of this money, will come from eurozone
governments in the form of new 15- to 30-year loans
carrying an interest rate of 3.5 percent. The IMF,
which provided €30 billion in the course of the first
bail-out is expected to provide around that much this
time too, if Christine Lagarde, its new European head
has her way. And private creditors will swap or roll
over 135 billion euros of existing loans into new,
longer-term instruments.
This split, it is now estimated lets the banks off
very lightly. This should have been expected when
The Institute of International Finance, the Washington-headquartered
association of leading international banks, emerged
an important player in the negotiations. According
to the IIF, as a result of the deal the banks are
set to lose a possibly overestimated €54 billion.
But that is far short of the more than €200 billion
they would have lost if Greece was allowed to spiral
into total default.
It was clear that eurozone governments were keen to
avoid that outcome because it would have meant the
break up of the zone and a devastating hit for the
euro. But so were governments elsewhere scared of
the consequences for a financial world that has been
just bailed out of a crisis at huge cost and for a
real economy that is still limping back to recovery.
Using this fact, finance first mobilised the much-discredited
rating agencies to hold all to ransom by declaring
that any debt restructuring would force them to declare
''selective default''. That did not prevent restructuring
but was enough to persuade the others involved to
soften the hit that finance capital would be required
to take. In this effort, another member of the ''epistemic
community'' that finance has built to validate its
demands, the European Central Bank (ECB), also played
a role. The ECB too opposed any restructuring on the
grounds that it would reduce the value of the collateral
that Greek banks provide for the support it provides
them. This combined effort, orchestrated by the IIF,
allowed banks to substantially lighten the loss they
would have to suffer.
But eurozone governments and the IMF are paying a
much higher cost for the deal. According to an analysis
by Breakingviews reported in the New York Times (propping-up-banks-as-well-as-greece.html),
this loan-tranche of €109 billion euros they are providing
would be worth only 54 billion euros when discounted,
implying a 50 percent haircut. Not surprisingly, emerging
market directors on the board of the Fund have objected
to the IMF's involvement in the deal. According to
the Financial
Times, Paulo Nogueira Batista, who represents
Brazil and eight other countries on the IMF's executive
board, declared in an interview that since this is
the ''first big decision'' that Lagarde is taking
as head of the fund, she has an ideal opportunity
to dispel suspicions of bias towards European bondholders.
''The community of fund-watchers around the world
will be looking to see if she can transcend her European
origins,'' he reportedly said.
What is galling to most is the fact that at the end
of all this, the problem remains unresolved. Greek
public debt is still in excess of its gross domestic
product. Servicing that even on slightly lighter terms
seems near impossible in the midst of austerity that
spells recession. Another bail-out is inevitable.
The danger is that next time round governments across
Europe and elsewhere may be overcome with bail-out
fatigue and just risk wholesale default. The banks
and private creditors would then get their due. But
that is small comfort, since the fall-out for the
rest may be too much to bear.
* You can follow the discussion
at http://triplecrisis.com/another-victory-for-finance/#more-3844
August
02, 2011.
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