Monday, May 23, 2011

Scenarios of A Greece Default

Andrew Lilico writing in the UK’s Telegraph draws up a litany of possible scenarios of a Greece default.

He writes,

It is when, not if. Financial markets merely aren’t sure whether it’ll be tomorrow, a month’s time, a year’s time, or two years’ time (it won’t be longer than that). Given that the ECB has played the “final card” it employed to force a bailout upon the Irish – threatening to bankrupt the country’s banking sector – presumably we will now see either another Greek bailout or default within days.

What happens when Greece defaults. Here are a few things:

- Every bank in Greece will instantly go insolvent.

- The Greek government will nationalise every bank in Greece.

- The Greek government will forbid withdrawals from Greek banks.

- To prevent Greek depositors from rioting on the streets, Argentina-2002-style (when the Argentinian president had to flee by helicopter from the roof of the presidential palace to evade a mob of such depositors), the Greek government will declare a curfew, perhaps even general martial law.

- Greece will redenominate all its debts into “New Drachmas” or whatever it calls the new currency (this is a classic ploy of countries defaulting)

Read the rest here

I share Austrian economics Professor Dr. Antony Mueller’s opinion, that these exactly serve as main reasons why Greece would likely avoid a default.

It’s more than just economics as the Greek or PIIGS crisis would mostly account for politics.

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As the Economist wrote last April (bold emphasis mine)

THE announcement on April 6th that Portugal will become the third euro-area country to receive a bail-out was not well received in Germany. As the largest euro-area country, it is contributing 20% or €52 billion ($75 billion) to the bail-out funds of the three profligate countries, mostly via the euro area's European Financial Stability Facility. This is dwarfed however, by Germany's banks' exposure to the three countries, which totals €230 billion. Only around 12% of this is sovereign or public debt, but a sovereign default could easily lead to a slew of domestic bank and corporate defaults too, to which the country is far more exposed. America is also footing a cool €14 billion via the IMF's contribution to the bail-out. But it too seems to have got good value for money—its banks have a total of €144 billion in exposure to the three countries.

And as earlier said, today’s monetary architecture makes for an intricate web of entwined cartel and patron-client relationships among central banks, governments and the banking system.

Unless we see a systemic crisis unravel, any resolution will likely be molded around these political relationships. Expect more inflationism to be used.

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