Thursday, April 2, 2015

The Low Euro: Greece's Salvation?

Greece is within a few weeks of running out of money to pay its debts.  Default looms, and it could cause financial disruption in Europe and around the world.  Yet the Greek government and the Euro bloc are at loggerheads in an Alphonse-and-Gaston routine where true compromise is as commonplace as hen's teeth.  Sounds like Congress.  Meanwhile, the rest of us wait for Godot. 

Luck, however, is part of life, and both Greece and the EU are very lucky.  In its current state of economic extremis (and Greece is suffering the equivalent of the U.S. Great Depression of the 1930s),  Greece would want to depreciate its currency.  If it could do so, depreciation would make its export businesses more competitive and bring in tourism.  But Greece, being part of the Euro bloc, has no control over its currency.  The European Central Bank calls the shots for the Euro. 

Serendipity would have it that the ECB decided recently to engage in quantitative easing (i.e., the buying of Euro-denominated bonds in the open market) as a way to stimulate the EU's stagnant economy.  Quantitative easing is one way of printing money, and the Euro has fallen by about 25% as a consequence.  A 25% price move is an elephantine move in the currency markets, and changes all kinds of economic relationships.  European exports just got gussied up in a big way, and European tourism is now a bargain compared to a year ago. 

Greece doesn't export a lot outside of Europe, but it is one heck of a tourist destination.  If given some time, Greece's tourist business will probably pick up.  Some of Greece's exports might be shifted to non-Euro bloc nations.  Greece might have a shot at recovery.

Much of the problem is that neither the EU nor the Greek government trust each other.  Definitive resolution is impossible without trust.  The result has been a steady kicking of the can down the road every time Greece and the EU have to negotiate.  This time, however, if they kick the can down the road (which is one possible outcome of the current impasse), the consequence may be positive.  If Greece has a couple of years to turn itself around using the low Euro, it may have a shot at recovering enough to satisfy the EU's debt collectors.  But will the EU and Greece muddle through one more set of negotiations?  If everyone were rational, they might pull it off.  But then again, if everyone were rational, they wouldn't be in the mess they are now in.

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