Alphen,
Netherlands. 19 March. In “1984” George Orwell wrote, “Doublethink
means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one’s mind, simultaneously,
and accepting both of them”. I was
reminded of doublethink (to that add double-speak) watching Europe’s
politicians and Eurocrats dance on the head of a political pin to distance themselves
from the so-called ‘one-off’ Deposit Tax Levy Confiscation of ordinary Cypriot’s
money.
So, who will pay for Cyprus and will the money be put to good use?
The logic is
brutal. With Cyprus representing only 0.2%
of the Eurozone economy, the Cypriot banking sector some 330% of Cypriot GDP
and with 30% of deposits in Cypriot banks Russian (and much of it of very dubious
provenance) Cyprus can only fund its side of the proposed €10 billion ($13 bn)
bailout via bank depositors.
Why this particular deal
and why now? For once the EU is being unfairly
blamed for a crisis not of its making (aside from the fact that the Euro is a political
project that does not work). German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, supported by her Finnish and Dutch counterparts, wants
to demonstrate prior to the September German elections that she is being
prudent with German taxpayer’s money. And,
under no circumstances must the bond markets be spooked so that the borrowing
costs soar of the bigger Eurozone debtors such as Greece, Italy, Ireland,
Portugal and Spain – at least not until after September.
As of today all
involved are either retreating fast from imposing the now infamous ‘haircut’ on
the small depositor or blaming the Cypriots themselves for this disaster. The suggestion is that depositors with
over €20,000 ($26k) will now have 6.9% of their savings in Cypriot banks taken from them whilst those over €100,000 ($130k) will have 10% confiscated. This means dodgy
Russians and retired Brits neither of whom are hugely popular with those who
run the Eurozone will be hit.
Would the money be put to good use?
Well, this reflects yet another
fundamental untruth this crisis has spawned.
Yes, it is true that the northern, western European taxpayer has already
paid a lot either funding or under-writing ‘loans’ that will never be
repaid. At the same time Berlin has done
all it can to ring-fence its taxpayers and find other people to pay for a crisis
that by and large had its origins in the ill-conceived leadership of Berlin,
Brussels and Paris when the Euro was set up.
The half-measures under discussion simply prolong the agony and increase
the costs which have effectively turned the EU into a mutual impoverishment
pact.
Therefore, ‘haircuts’ will
fail because they do not address the fundamental problem of the Eurozone; the
need for tight and common fiscal discipline and structural reform of southern
Eurozone economies. In other words, the
Euro will only ever be stable if there is real fiscal and banking union or if the
Eurozone contracts into a customs zone of reasonably similar economies
organised around Germany. However, the
former would demand the effective end of national sovereignty and democratic
accountability, whilst the latter would see southern European economies cast
out into the global economy and forced to compete. That would make current austerity measures
look like benign charity.
There is a more
immediate consequence; the future cost of crisis-management will now inevitably
grow. This morning the spokesman of EU
Council President Herman van Rompuy tried to play down the Cyprus crisis by
suggesting it was a special case.
Special or not a clear message has been sent that future bailouts could
well involve EU-inspired raids on the small savings of small people. This will almost certainly mean that when the
next crisis inevitably erupts in Spain, Italy or elsewhere people will rush to
withdraw their savings from banks and thus triggering a massive banking run. It
is banking runs that kill currencies. In
other words this proposal will make contagion more not less likely.
So, making small depositors
pay for the crisis makes little or no sense other than to stave off the
immediate disaster. Indeed, without federation
or fracture the crisis cannot be resolved only temporarily contained. Critically, the Cypriot fiasco reinforces the
toxicity that is the political incompetence that created the Eurozone crisis
and which is sustaining it.
Orwell also wrote in “1984”,
“The choice for mankind lies between freedom and happiness and for the great
bulk of mankind happiness is better”.
Sadly, as Cyprus reveals the Eurozone is generating neither freedom nor
happiness, just fear.
Come September and the
German elections these realities will have to be faced and the EU’s current
phoney war will come to an end with a bang…if not before.
Who will pay for Cyprus? All of us sooner or later.
Who will pay for Cyprus? All of us sooner or later.
Julian Lindley-French
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