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Charlemagne - Chronicle of a struggle

Agonising over a short-term fix for Greece must not hide longer-term problems

Jun 6th 2015 | From the print edition

Timekeeper

SINCE taking office in January Greece s radical-left government has been a

model of inconstancy and incoherence. Yet one of its messages has been

admirably consistent: that Greece s problems belong to the entire euro zone.

Over the past four months Greece s creditors have become wearily accustomed to

batting away grandiose proclamations by Alexis Tsipras s band of merry men. But

as their talks with the Greeks approach a crunch, this is a proposition they

should take seriously.

Excluded from capital markets, Greece needs bail-out money to stay afloat. In

exchange its creditors demand reforms and budget cuts designed, as they see it,

to put Greece s finances on an even keel. Elected to reject such austerity, the

Syriza government began negotiations with smiles and good cheer. Yanis

Varoufakis, the finance minister, toured Europe to explain that the euro zone

would work for the benefit of all if only its leaders would abandon their

self-defeating obsession with austerity. But as the mood has soured and talks

have gone nowhere, the message has taken on a darker tone. In an opinion piece

for Le Monde this week Mr Tsipras declared that the strategy adopted by Greece

s creditors risked the split and division of the euro zone, and consequently

of the EU . Those who wish to maintain this approach, he suggested, should

re-read Hemingway s For Whom the Bell Tolls , a brutal account of the Spanish

civil war.

It is understandable that the leader of a country staring into the abyss might

be drawn to apocalyptic imagery. But Hemingway s clipped sentences do not quite

capture the absurdity that has marked the latest episode of the Greek saga. A

better guide is surely Kafka. For the Greeks, the impenetrable institutions

they have encountered, seemingly impervious to reason and answering only to

their own mysterious laws, resemble the bureaucracy that breaks the spirit of

Josef K in The Trial . Euclid Tsakalotos, a senior Greek negotiator who has a

Marxist background, likens the creditors robotic insistence on demand-killing

labour reform to the intransigence of Soviet pen-pushers.

For Greece s euro-zone partners, by contrast, the experience of dealing with Mr

Tsipras and Mr Varoufakis after years of more-or-less pliant Greek governments

recalls the shock delivered to the family of Gregor Samsa in Kafka s

Metamorphosis . One day they wake up to find their hard-working son

inexplicably transformed into a hideous insect, whose attempts at communication

reach their ears as incomprehensible screeches and squeals. No efforts to

accommodate the creature succeed; ultimately only its expulsion or death will

do.

With luck, Greece can avoid that fate. On June 3rd, with Greece s reserves

running perilously dry ahead of some hefty debt repayments, Mr Tsipras flew to

Brussels, where he was presented with detailed reforms drawn up by the three

institutions that monitor Greece s bail-out: the European Commission, the

European Central Bank and the IMF. Mr Tsipras s agreement, and the Greeks

implementation of the measures, would unlock the funds Greece needs to stay

afloat. But that would require painful Greek concessions, particularly on

pensions, which Syriza has vowed to protect. The meeting ended without a deal;

talks will continue.

Outright rejection could spell disaster for Greece, as deposits flee banks (see

article) and the ECB reduces liquidity support. That in turn might mean capital

controls, the first step on a road that could lead back to the drachma. It has

become fashionable among some euro-zone politicians to suggest that a Greek

exit from the euro would be manageable. But this complacency is not shared by

the OECD, a rich-country think-tank, which has warned that failure to resolve

Greece s problems could hurt growth and imperil the public finances of other

euro-zone members. The Americans have also started to voice concerns. An

initial deal within the next week now looks quite likely, although plenty of

hurdles would remain, such as ratification in difficult parliaments like the

Bundestag. Mr Tsipras would also face resistance at home if Syriza backbenchers

sniff capitulation.

But the arguments over resolving Greece s liquidity crisis have made it harder

to focus on larger challenges such as the sustainability of its debt pile,

which at 180% of GDP is far bigger than it was ever meant to be. A third

bail-out may nod towards this by, for example, further extending debt

maturities. But there is no real vision for Greece s economic future. The large

primary surpluses demanded of the country creditors have asked for 3.5% of GDP

from 2018 in perpetuity bear witness to intellectual exhaustion in the euro

zone.

Wanted: a vision

The Greeks must shoulder much of the responsibility for their predicament. Mr

Tsipras s strategy has been back-to-front: to find an audience for his views on

European democracy, he needed first to earn the trust of his creditors rather

than shatter it. Unlike every other country that has received a bail-out, no

Greek government seems fully to have accepted the need for reform.

But the Europeans are hardly blameless. Presented with the first authentic

democratic challenge to their rules, they pettifogged on detail and fretted

about moral hazard. One problem has been the presence of the IMF, which is more

concerned to ensure its sums add up than to paper over the political troubles

of the euro zone. It is running out of patience with the Europeans. But the

Germans insist on keeping it involved to counter what they perceive as

softheadedness in the commission. This is what passes for strategy inside the

euro zone these days.

Kafka s tales often follow their own spirals of logic towards grisly, even

tragic conclusions. The final chapters of Greece s story remain to be written.

An author is desperately needed.