Greece, Germany And The IMF: The Struggle Continues

 | Jul 09, 2018 02:13AM ET

Introduction

Since 2010, I have been following the economic struggles of Greece . Back then, I noted that countries using the same currency lose an important adjustment mechanism: changes in the value of their currency. This is fine for the most productive countries. But for countries whose goods and services are more expensive, it means customers, both at home and abroad will be lost. This manifests itself in falling exports and increasing imports, resulting in an unsustainable trade balance. That is what happened to Greece. It simply ran out of Euros.

So far, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the European Central Bank (ECB) and the European Commission (EC) have together provided Greece with over €330 billion in bailout monies. That amounts to 180% of Greece’s annual GDP!

A little history is in order here. Back in 2010, EC/ECB and the IMF granted funds to Greece under a typical Fund stabilization program: reduce the government deficit and rein in expenditures. Table 1 shows the result of this policy: as the government deficit was drawn down, the unemployment rate rocketed to 27.5% in 2013. Clearly too much austerity!