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2011-06-30 12:40:19
ALL eyes are on the Greek parliament, where a vote on a new package of
austerity measures is imminent. Europeans and the IMF have made additional
payouts of their already agreed Greek support plan dependent on adoption of
further austerity measures, deemed necessary to get the struggling nation back
on track to meet its deficit reduction goals. The Greeks, not without cause,
are angry with the new demands on them. The contractionary impact of the cuts
in place has dragged the economy deeper into recession, making progress on
fiscal consolidation slow. Meanwhile, European leaders, and the European
Central Bank especially, are reluctant to foist any of the pain of insolvency
on creditors.
Given the apocalyptic language in the press ("suicide vote") and the visible
anger in the Athens streets, one might assume that the worst is nigh. Markets,
however, are behaving as though passage of the austerity measures is a foregone
conclusion. European markets are up, the euro is strengthening, and yields on
peripheral debt are backing away from recent crisis highs. Traders are
anticipating a positive vote, securing aid payments to Greece and forestalling
any immediate meltdown.
Yet virtually no one believes that the Greece's underlying difficulties, to say
nothing of the periphery's as a whole, have been addressed. Greece will need a
new aid deal eventually; it cannot hope to return to markets to borrow for some
time. Negotiations over that package will lead to more recriminations, more
demands on Greece, and more brinksmanship.
But for now, all eyes are on the Greek parliament, where the immediate crisis
is likely, knock wood, to be defused...
UPDATE: The austerity measure passed. Europe's disaster remains a slow one,
rather than a fast one.