The Best Way The US Can Help Europe Out of Its Mess - Choharis
The Best Way The US Can Help Europe Out of Its Mess - Choharis
The Best Way The US Can Help Europe Out of Its Mess - Choharis
The result is that the worlds largest economic area is frozen, with no fiscally or politically viable options and no institutions that can impose any. Rather than fiscal unity and bailouts, the United States should promote two new institutional frameworks that offer finality and reform. Eurozone exit. For months, Spanish, Italian, and other periphery depositors have been fleeing southern Eurozone banks by transferring their euro deposits to the safe havens of northern banks, in fear of losing their savings if they are converted to a discounted national currency. Bloomberg estimates that Spanish, Italian, and other periphery depositors have transferred 789 billion to banks in Germany, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. Thus while periphery governments are borrowing hundreds of billions to recapitalize their failing banks, their depositors are depleting those banks reserves by shifting currency abroad. Leaving the Eurozone would allow countries to devalue their currencies, lower their labor costs, and make the costs of their goods and services more competitive. Although their costs of borrowing would rise in the short-term, countries like Greece would be forced to improve their tax systems even as the tax base expanded from higher exports and economic growth. The challenge for the Eurozone is to construct an equitable, transparent, predictable, speedy transition procedure that minimizes the risks for exiting countries and the region as a whole. The procedure must also be standardized, so that citizens and creditors can understand the potential risks, costs, and benefits. Sovereign bankruptcy. The United States can also help establish a sovereign default facility under the auspices of the International Monetary Fund to allow countries plagued by insurmountable debt a chance to recover. Sovereign bankruptcy would have no provision for liquidating a countrys assets and distributing the proceeds to creditors, and proceedings could be begun only by countries, voluntarilynot creditors. But it would allow public, transparent, legal procedures to govern, and yield final results that would end the need for future bailouts and limit the risk of regional contagion. A full-fledged mechanism will take time to design and implement, but the U.S. can play the role of an honest broker to shape and potentially administer an expedited bankruptcy process, perhaps based on Chapter 9 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code for municipal bankruptcies. Enabling countries to exit the Eurozone and declare bankruptcy may result in significant economic and social dislocations. Estimates for the cost of an exit from the Eurozone by Greece alone range from 150 billion ($189 billion) to 1 trillion. But these estimates must be weighed against the costs of indefinite bailouts. It will be better to use limited funds and political capital to mitigate the short-term economic and social hardships that may result from countries exiting the Eurozone and declaring bankruptcy, than to deplete those funds and watch the contagion spread. At the least Europeans deserve the choice.
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