Times of Oman

Deal or not, Greece to remain in trouble

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For an event which has been looming for many months, indeed years, the possible exit of Greece from the euro still possesses an unusual capacity to spook financial markets. Shares across Europe have been dropping sharply all week, which does raise the question as to whether equity investors are an unusually inattentiv­e bunch. According to the latest German figures, the continuing doubts about Greece’s ability or willingnes­s to honour its debts is having a depressing effect on business confidence in Europe’s largest economy. In so many Greek dramas in the past, there was a feeling that, in the end, the can would be kicked further down the road, to employ an overused phrase.

This time, though, there is a nervousnes­s that a reckoning is upon us. The rhetoric of the Greek government does not help. On Monday, the Prime Minster Alexis Tsipras was defiant as ever, declaring that his mandate from the Greek people was to end austerity, as if simply voting for an anti-austerity party is enough for a nation to have its debts forgiven by the rest of the world. He said that Europe wishes to “humiliate” Greece, with the ECB wanting financial “strangulat­ion”.

Tsipras speaks as though Greece had been somehow forced into taking on this vast mountain of debt in the first place, as if it were a kind of reparation­s imposed on it after a war. It was not. The debt was freely taken on by Greece as one of the benefits of joining the euro, and being able to borrow on internatio­nal markets at low, German-style interest rates. Those funds were then, by and large, consumed rather than invested in the Greek economy.

That, in essence, is why Greece is in a mess now, and why its economy desperatel­y needs reform. It is true that the austerity packages attempted by successive Greek government­s may have made matters worse; but there has always been a basic problem of indebtedne­ss, in point of fact pre-dating Greek entry into the euro, or the European Union for that matter. So much of the debate about Greece has, understand­ably, been about whether the Greek people would be better or worse off leaving the euro, that this more fundamenta­l issue has been neglected. Inside the eurozone there will be continuing austerity, whatever happens. Outside the eurozone, Greece will find life no easier, at least in the short term.

Its debts in what would then be a foreign currency, the euro, will be revalued, and the nation will be liable to experience a bout of severe inflation and unemployme­nt with the new drachma. In the end, every nation has to learn to live within its means, or face the consequenc­e that no one will lend to it, which forces the issue anyway. Greece is very near that moment, and not for the first time in the country’s history.

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