Eurozone: In Goes the Kitchen Sink

What happened to the global economy and what we can do about it

with 54 comments

By Peter Boone and Simon Johnson

The eurozone self-rescue plan announced last night has three main elements:

At first pass this package might seem to be in with what we recommended a week ago and again on Thursday.

But the European central banks have come in very early "“ with government bond prices still high "“ and there is no sign yet of credible fiscal adjustment for Spain and Portugal.  The eurozone apparently did not even discuss the situation in Ireland, which seems increasingly troubling.

This is a whole new level of global moral hazard "“ the result of an alliance of convenience between troubled governments in the south of Europe and the north European banks (and implicitly, north American banks) who enabled their debt habit.  The Europeans promise to unveil a mechanism this week that will "prevent abuse" by borrowing countries, but it is hard to see how this would really work in Europe today.

Overall, this is our assessment:

The underlying problem in the euro zone is that Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain are locked into a currency which means they are uncompetitive in trade terms while they are also running large budget deficits.  To get out of this they need large wage and price cuts to restore competitiveness, and they need to make fiscal cuts to get budget balances back at sustainable levels. 

Markets decided these adjustments were going to be difficult, so spreads on those countries’ debts widened (i.e., interest rates relative to German government bonds).  As the rates go up, this causes local asset prices to fall, concerns over bank balance sheets increase, etc.  This combination was causing an incipient run on banks.  Any country with its own currency could reasonably devalue in such a situation, but this is not an option within the euro bloc.

All these problems were exacerbated by the appearance that the Germans were going to be unwilling to bail out troubled nations – and would eventually chose to bail out their own banks instead.  It is this risk which is now resolved.  The Germans have shown willingness to provide very large amounts of money (the 750bn euro support is probably just enough for Spain and Portugal if they got packages in line with that received by Greece) and they would obviously provide more if needed (e.g., for Italy).  (Here again is the ready reckoning chart for interlinkages between indebted Europeans.)

However, the solvency issue remains.  The Spanish and Portuguese have said they will now cut their budgets further, but already their forecasts were optimistic, and neither has seemed willing to admit they have severe budget problems, so we will need to watch how they implement in the near term.  Greece remains simply far too indebted. 

As Willem Buiter (formerly Bank of England, now at Citigroup) remarked last week, you have the greatest incentive to default when you are running a balanced primary budget (i.e., after substantial budget cuts) and still have a large government debt outstanding.   His point is that the incentive structure of these programs means they will postpone a decision to default which would otherwise be rational now. 

There is no discussion of Ireland, which has one of the highest deficits of all the EU nations.  This is a vulnerability to the European Stabilization Mechanism "“ more countries will flock to its embrace.

There is a more subtle issue with the seniority of debt.  The EU packages to these countries are all senior to existing creditors.  These creditors know therefore that countries which need packages will get senior funds from the IMF and EU, and, therefore recovery values for bonds will be less. 

This is perfectly fair since packages come when no one else will lend, but it explains why packages do not reduce secondary market yields as low as people would expect.  The yield on Greek bonds needs to stay high given the risk that the bonds could have 70% writedowns if the likely default does happen.  The same is true, to a lesser extent, for Portugal, Ireland and Spain.  All of these might eventually need to access the 750bn euros and might eventually default.  Bond market yields need to stay high.

The decision by the European Central Bank (ECB) to intervene in the markets is very important.  That will help keep markets liquid "“ but the ECB will probably not buy a lot of debt.

Will the ECB buy a great deal of Greek debt?  We doubt it since this constitutes a clear, large credit risk.  But it will be interesting to watch.  If the ECB is not large in the market they will not impact spreads beyond reducing the liquidity risk premium.  Today most of these nations have substantial default risk over 5-10 years, so spreads need to stay high – although they will come in from current levels.

The European Central Bank intervention and this package raise enormous moral hazard issues.  The ECB's management was forced into this kicking and screaming.  It was only when they realized that the whole euro zone financial system was at risk of collapse that they threw the kitchen sink at the problem.  This can now go two ways:  either they tighten fiscal policy across the eurozone, and introduce much more rigorous and enforced rules on deficits and profligate credit through banks, or, they let a system persist which is another “doomsday machine” that will live again to grow, and could one day topple them.

To ultimately get out of this mess, the euro zone needs to grow fast enough to allow nations to grow out of debt.  The global backdrop here is very positive in the short term.  The jobs numbers in the US last week and strong numbers out of core northern Europe suggest the world can grow.  No doubt the ECB and the Fed will use the eurozone scare to justify longer loose policies.  

It could be that in two years time Europe’s deficits are much lower, the ECB has hardly bought any bonds, and they have successfully managed a Greek debt restructuring while Spain is out of trouble, and Portugal and Ireland are scraping by in limbo but now isolated problems.  With the US likely to still be running near 10% GDP budget deficits – who will seem more risky then?  This immediate confidence in the US dollar that has come out of this European crisis could very quickly evaporate.

Alternatively, the underlying fiscal problems in Europe could fester "“ and the "rules" designed to limit moral hazard may turn out to be a complete paper tiger.  In that case, the Europeans again have to make a fateful decision: Do they try to inflate out of the debt burdens of their weakest member countries; or do they instead try to manage selective default, keeping in mind that most Greek debt at that stage will be held by other eurozone governments.

Written by Simon Johnson

May 10, 2010 at 6:00 am

Posted in Commentary

Tagged with eurozone crisis

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By now I can only laugh at how, the more this insane combination of Tower of Babel and Rube Goldberg contraption becomes unsustainable at its existing level of complexity, the more forcibly reality is pulling it in the direction of simplification with the very real force of gravity, the more the answer, even from the normally more sane and rational commentators, is to add more layers of complexity.

Rube Goldberg’s running itself to pieces? Double it!

The system’s already so overheated and turbulent the chaotic forces are smashing it to pieces? Turn up the heat! Pump more energy into the system!

You’re already busted and the dealer’s showing 21? Double down!

Most of all, no matter how deep the hole is you’re in, the answer is always to keep digging. Especially if you can use the shovel not to dig, but just to club a slave who must dig with his own bloodied hands.

By now the Bailout combines an extreme level of existentialist absurdity with an extreme level of world-historical crime. It’s definitely the worst financial crime in history, with no end in sight to the looting. Nothing short of revolution or total collapse will finally bring an end to the robbery.

Meanwhile, is it also the most clinically insane project in history? Especially from the point of view of the non-rich, i.e. all but a handful in even the “richest” countries, who must after all tolerate this crime or else it couldn’t take place, it’s hard to come up with a rival nominee.

I’m sorry to goof on Simon, but everything even the better commentators write on this, where they’re so straight and serious about it, reads like something from Lewis Carroll. (I especially like the parts about how “growth” will redeem this. I picture a bizarre musical soundtrack playing, and outlandish cartoon characters talking, while I read stuff like that.)

Russ

May 10, 2010 at 6:28 am

yours is one of the very few insights into this indescribable fraud and insanity that the mainstream may, if lucky, discover in 20+ years

ralbol

May 10, 2010 at 8:28 am

My guess is: “mainstream” will be looking at what Russ writes about squarely in the eye…within months, not years.

Why?

Because the masters of the universe are at the edge of the cliff. No more running room. Yeah, this latest ruse…just that, a ruse. A show. Yada yada yada markets will recover stock exchange rebounding propaganda propaganda propaganda sleight-of-hand sleight-of-hand sleight-of-hand mental gymnastics mental gymnastics mental gymnastics and all is well in the world. Except…

…the masses are getting clued in to the shell game. And are collectively getting close, very close to saying: You’re done, guys. We want ya outta there.

Too bad the “Controllers” didn’t – and still don’t – come clean, ‘fess up, make amends, start over.

Alas, they’ve chosen to hold on tighter. Only…not gonna work this time around. No matter how much financial word play Simon offers.

Not a question of “if” any longer. And my bet: The charade will come crashing down…sooner than you think.

Barbyrah

May 10, 2010 at 9:50 am

You are not alone Russ. When I am confronted with too much insanity on one particular day, I often look up the quote underneath, read it and find some sort of relief;

‘How have individuals been affected by the tech­nological advances of recent years? Here is the answer to this question given by a philosopher-psychiatrist, Dr. Erich Fromm:

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