Greece Bailout
Roadmap
The Greek government has faced an ongoing fiscal crisis for the past several years. Recently, for the third time, its Eurozone partners have been compelled to offer a bailout to the country. This is done to stabilize Greece's finances and to impose further measures on the Greek government to remedy the nation's budget and to ensure that there are no similar issues in future. The first part of the paper is a brief overview of the situation. The second part will outline some of the key issues that lead both to favor the bailout and to oppose it, and finally there will be analysis and a conclusion about whether or not bailing out Greece is the right thing to do. It will be argued that it is not, at least in the current form.
Background
There are several key issues at work with the Greek bailout. Greece was admitted to the European Union in 1981 and was a participant in the discussions about having a common currency for the European Union in the 1990s. The Maastricht Treaty set out the conditions for entry into the common currency, the euro, but Greece never met those conditions. Other nations in the Eurozone, however, had already set the precedent of overriding the Maastricht conditions, including Germany and France (Bloomberg, 2012). When Greece entered the Eurozone, despite it not meeting the Maastricht conditions, its bonds were only at a 51bp premium to German bonds, denoting modest risk. The economic crisis of 2007-2009, however, hit the Greek economy -- which was already weak -- hard. The new Greek government in 2009 revealed that previous estimates of government deficit were low, and its spending plans were only going to exacerbate the deficit. Bond rating agencies cut their rating on Greek sovereign debt, and the crisis began to spiral out of the control (Bloomberg, 2012).
There are several issues at play with Greece. The first is that the government has a revenue problem. While many view Greece as having a spending problem -- it does to some extent -- the real problem is rampant tax evasion that robs the government of the revenues needed to finance its social safety net and generous government wages (Surowiecki, 2011). The problem being persistent, and recession bringing no budget relief in sight for Greece, and with rates on Greek debt rising, the country moved towards default. Being in the Eurozone, it could not devalue its currency to spur economic growth -- assistance needed to come in other forms. These tended to be financial assistance from larger Eurozone nations, as Greek default would destabilize the entire currency union. This was predicted by many economists from the outside but for some reason the Europeans didn't envision that this would happen -- they were unprepared (Chu, 2012). The result has been that other Eurozone nations have negotiated a series of bailouts for the Greek government in exchange for an array of budget cuts -- but without addressing the revenue problem (Waterfield, 2014). The cuts have caused massive social unrest in Greece.
Pros/Cons
There are several advantages to the bailout. The Eurozone was borne of a grand idea of extending the EU's common market by bringing the continent under a single currency, removing another trade barrier. The Eurozone was set up with a central bank -- the European Central Bank -- to manage monetary policy but each member nation retained its own government to manage fiscal policy. This led to an inevitable imbalance between the fiscal policy approaches taken by each nation, and at times to a lack of cohesion between the policies of the ECB and its member nations. The Greek crisis has been a powerful example of that lack of cohesion -- Greece needing expansionary monetary policy and receiving austerity instead. The problem with this is that a default on Greek sovereign debt would destabilize the entire currency union. The Greek crisis is, therefore, a self-inflicted wound of the Eurozone's nations. They allowed Greece into the currency without having met the Maastricht conditions. They offered monetary policy misaligned with Greece's needs. And, they left constituent governments like that of Greece with no oversight in terms of fiscal policy. The pro-to the bailout therefore is that Germany and the other major Eurozone nations are effectively cleaning up their own mess. They are also upholding the tacit agreement of Maastricht, wherein the European economy would benefit when stronger nations were able to prop up weaker ones. The only problem is that the...
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