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 | Apr 21, 2015 05:16AM ET

What would you do if you lived in Greece?

The Greek government Monday decreed that state bodies, with the exception of pension funds, must transfer their reserves to the Bank of Greece for the state’s use. “State bodies” includes everything from hospitals to local governments. Estimates are that the move will provide EUR 1.2bn to EUR 2bn, which should allow the government to pay civil servants’ salaries and pensions this month. The government is then hoping that a Eurogroup summit on May 11 will release EUR 1.9bn in profits from Greek bonds held by the Eurosystem. That would allow the government to meet a EUR 747mn payment due to the IMF the following day. Nonetheless, with EUR 2.8bn in maturing T-bills during the month, things will still be tight during May. And the June debt repayment schedule is even heavier.

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The problem though as I see it is the populace’s reaction to the move. On the one hand, regional authorities were said to be planning legal action against the decree. At the same time, ordinary citizens may see this as the first step towards capital controls and confiscation of their bank accounts, as happened in Cyprus. What would you do with your money if you lived in Greece? I expect that this will simply hasten the outflow of funds from Greek banks and the collapse of the banking system. ECB Vice President Constancio yesterday noted that introducing capital controls in a country doesn’t mean that the country has to leave the euro, as the example of Cyprus shows – something that will hardly reassure the average Greek saver. To make matters worse, Constancio was not particularly supportive of the Greek banking system. “I cannot promise that we will fund Greece whatever the situation,” he said. He pointed out that the ECB’s rules allow it to supply funds only to banks that are solvent and have acceptable collateral. Just FYI, here are the share prices of several major Greek banks, with the prices at this time in 2009 – near the bottom of the Lehman Bros. collapse – in parenthesis. You can judge for yourself whether the market thinks these banks are solvent: o National Bank of Greece €1.00 (€54.59) o Alpha Bank €0.21 (€2.15) o Piraeus Bank €0.23 (€27.85)

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