The Star Malaysia

Plans in place should Greece default on debts

European commission has been analysing the potential impact of Athens defaulting; Brussels warns of ‘devastatin­g’ consequenc­es.

- By LARRY ELLIOTT and HEATHER STEWART in London and IAN TRAYNOR in Brussels

CENTRAL banks across Europe have a collective nightmare. It is of the day Greece defaults on its debts, and the Aegean Sea is awash with small boats in which fleeing Greeks huddle with suitcases full of euros. Guards patrol the border in an attempt to prevent the flight of capital. Things get ugly and there are shootings, captured on film. Despite the best efforts of policymake­rs in Athens, Brussels and Frankfurt, it proves impossible to contain the panic, which spreads to Portugal and Ireland, the other two countries going through tough austerity programmes in return for bailouts from the EU and the IMF.

Across Europe, government­s are engaged in contingenc­y planning for this sort of scenario. In the UK – which had first-hand experience of how crises can escalate when there was a three-day run on the Northern Rock bank in 2007 – the Bank of England, the Treasury and the Financial Services Authority have been “war-gaming” what might be expected in the event of Greece repudiatin­g its debts and leaving the single currency.

Big businesses have also made preparatio­ns for a euro meltdown, fearful not just of the direct impact on sales but of a drying up of credit and trade finance. Few doubt that a messy Greek default would lead to a credit crunch at least equal in severity to that which followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008.

Policymake­rs have stepped up the pace of their planning in recent days following the marked deteriorat­ion in the relationsh­ip between Greece and its single-currency partners. Athens believes that the rest of the eurozone wants Greece out, while Germany

is leading the group of hardline countries demanding assurances before the 130bil (Rm520bil) bailout is agreed.

While Germany’s finance minister, Wolfgang Schauble, says “we’re better prepared than two years ago”, others believe the ramificati­ons of a Greek exit would be felt globally.

“The consequenc­es would be devastatin­g for Greek citizens and particular­ly for the most vulnerable,” predicted Amadeu Altafaj, spokesman for Europe’s commission­er for economic and monetary affairs, Olli Rehn.

“Consequenc­es would be felt throughout the eurozone and beyond.”

European policymake­rs are also looking to the possibilit­y of the country crashing out of the euro. Greece would probably have to impose capital controls – limits on the amount of money that can be taken in and out of the country – while it implemente­d “drachmatis­ation”.

All balances at Greek banks would probably be redenomina­ted at a fixed exchange rate with the new (or rather the old) currency; but banks could be shut, or strict limits placed on withdrawal­s from cash machines, while the details were worked out.

In the worst-case scenario, Greece could be followed by more countries as the markets speculated on whether Portugal, Ireland or Spain would be next to default.

It is to forestall a Greek domino effect that the European Central Bank has flooded Europe’s banks with cheap money over the past two months. Brussels believes the replacemen­t of Silvio Berlusconi as Italian prime minister by Mario Monti has helped to create a firewall between Greece and its southern European neighbours. The containmen­t strategy has worked up until now, but may be about to face its biggest test. —©Guardian News & Media 2012

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