http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/eurozone-sovereign-debt-solution-by-yanis-varoufakis-2015-08#hkWMxL6hWI8BtzdD.99
Yanis Varoufakis
ATHENS – Greece’s public debt
has been put back on Europe’s agenda. Indeed, this was perhaps the Greek
government’s main achievement during its agonizing five-month standoff with its
creditors. After years of “extend and pretend,” today almost everyone agrees
that debt restructuring is essential. Most important, this is true not just for Greece.
In February, I presented to
the Eurogroup (which convenes the finance ministers of eurozone member states)
a menu of options, including GDP-indexed bonds, which Charles Goodhart recently endorsed in the Financial Times, perpetual bonds
to settle the legacy debt on the European Central Bank’s books, and so forth.
One hopes that the ground is now better prepared for such proposals to take
root, before Greece sinks further into the quicksand of insolvency.
But the more interesting
question is what all of this means for the eurozone as a whole. The prescient
calls from Joseph
Stiglitz, Jeffrey Sachs, and many others for a different approach to
sovereign debt in general need to be modified to fit the particular characteristics
of the eurozone’s crisis.
The eurozone is unique among
currency areas: Its central bank lacks a state to support its decisions, while
its member states lack a central bank to support them in difficult times.
Europe’s leaders have tried to fill this institutional lacuna with complex,
non-credible rules that often fail to bind, and that, despite this failure, end
up suffocating member states in need.
One such rule is the
Maastricht Treaty’s cap on member states’ public debt at 60% of GDP. Another is
the treaty’s “no bailout” clause. Most member states, including Germany, have
violated the first rule, surreptitiously or not, while for several the second
rule has been overwhelmed by expensive financing packages.
The problem with debt
restructuring in the eurozone is that it is essential and, at the same time,
inconsistent with the implicit constitution underpinning the monetary union.
When economics clashes with an institution’s rules, policymakers must either
find creative ways to amend the rules or watch their creation collapse.
Here, then, is an idea (part
of A Modest Proposal for Resolving the Euro Crisis,
co-authored by Stuart Holland, and James K. Galbraith) aimed at re-calibrating
the rules, enhancing their spirit, and addressing the underlying economic problem.
In brief, the ECB could
announce tomorrow morning that, henceforth, it will undertake a debt-conversion
program for any member state that wishes to participate. The ECB will service
(as opposed to purchase) a portion of every maturing government bond
corresponding to the percentage of the member state’s public debt that is
allowed by the Maastricht rules. Thus, in the case of member states with
debt-to-GDP ratios of, say, 120% and 90%, the ECB would service, respectively,
50% and 66.7% of every maturing government bond.
To fund these redemptions on
behalf of some member states, the ECB would issue bonds in its own name,
guaranteed solely by the ECB, but repaid, in full, by the member state. Upon
the issue of such an ECB bond, the ECB would simultaneously open a debit
account for the member state on whose behalf it issued the bond.
The member state would then be
legally obliged to make deposits into that account to cover the ECB bonds’ coupons
and principal. Moreover, the member state’s liability to the ECB would enjoy
super-seniority status and be insured by the European Stability Mechanism
against the risk of a hard default.
Such a debt-conversion program
would offer five benefits. For starters, unlike the ECB’s current quantitative
easing, it would involve no debt monetization. Thus, it would run no risk of
inflating asset price bubbles.
Second, the program would
cause a large drop in the eurozone’s aggregate interest payments. The
Maastricht-compliant part of its members’ sovereign debt would be restructured
with longer maturities (equal to the maturity of the ECB bonds) and at the
ultra-low interest rates that only the ECB can fetch in international capital
markets.
Third, Germany’s long-term
interest rates would be unaffected, because Germany would neither be
guaranteeing the debt-conversion scheme nor backing the ECB’s bond issues.
Fourth, the spirit of the
Maastricht rule on public debt would be reinforced, and moral hazard would be
reduced. After all, the program would boost significantly the interest-rate
spread between Maastricht-compliant debt and the debt that remains in the
member states’ hands (which they previously were not permitted to accumulate).
Finally, GDP-indexed bonds and
other tools for dealing sensibly with unsustainable debt could be applied
exclusively to member states’ debt not covered by the program and in line with
international best practices for sovereign-debt management.
The obvious solution to the
euro crisis would be a federal solution. But federation has been made less, not
more, likely by a crisis that tragically set one proud nation against another.
Indeed, any political union
that the Eurogroup would endorse today would be disciplinarian and ineffective.
Meanwhile, the debt restructuring for which the eurozone – not just Greece – is
crying out is unlikely to be politically acceptable in the current climate.
But there are ways in which
debt could be sensibly restructured without any cost to taxpayers and in a
manner that brings Europeans closer together. One such step is the
debt-conversion program proposed here. Taking it would help to heal Europe’s
wounds and clear the ground for the debate that the European Union needs about
the kind of political union that Europeans deserve.
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