Grexit may still be on the table

Economists say Greece may be forced out of Eurozone by end 2016 unless it secures debt write-down

A customer enters a Piraeus Bank SA bank branch while another uses an automated teller machine (ATM) as banks reopen in Athens, Greece, on Monday, July 20th, 2015. However economists are still warning that there’s still a danger that Greece will be forced out of the euro region by the end of 2016. (Photograph: Matthew Lloyd/Bloomberg)
A customer enters a Piraeus Bank SA bank branch while another uses an automated teller machine (ATM) as banks reopen in Athens, Greece, on Monday, July 20th, 2015. However economists are still warning that there’s still a danger that Greece will be forced out of the euro region by the end of 2016. (Photograph: Matthew Lloyd/Bloomberg)

Don’t pack away the currency presses just yet, Greece’s euro exit may be back on the table next year. There’s still a danger that Greece will be forced out of the euro region by the end of 2016, according to 71 per cent of respondents in a Bloomberg survey of 34 economists.

Seventy per cent said they reckon Greece should be safe for the rest of 2015, though almost half said they thought the €86 bn bailout package Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is targeting will prove to be too small. While Tsipras is checking off the requirements to qualify for a third bailout, the flaws in the agreement he hammered out with euro-area leaders last week are fueling concerns thatGreece will struggle to implement the three-year program.

The European creditors are refusing to firm up their commitment to restructuring Greece's debts, a move the International Monetary Fund says is essential for the country to stabilise its finances. There are also doubts about the €50 billion-euro target for asset sales and, more fundamentally, the merits of forcing more austerity on a shattered economy.

“Without some form of debt relief, the package will never be big enough,” Peter Dixon, a global economist at Commerzbank AG in London, said in his response to the survey. “Loading additional loans onto a country which cannot afford to repay them corresponds to Einstein’s definition of insanity: Trying the same thing over and over again in the expectation of different results.”

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Greek bonds plummeted during Tsipras’s six-month clash with the country’s creditors, with the yield on the 2017 bonds exceeding 30 per cent before most trading was halted on June 26. The same debt was yielding less than 4 per cent in October and about 10 per cent when Tsipras took power in January. Greek financial markets will remain closed at least until parliament has on the second package of bailout on Wednesday, according to two officials. The government is drafting a decree to allow selective waivers on capital controls, and the best- case scenario is for markets to reopen Thursday, one of them said.

Tsipras did manage to reopen the country’s banks on Monday and he will ease somewhat the restrictions on withdrawals over the next two weeks.

The government also cleared its €2 billion of arrears with the IMF, made an overdue payment of €470 million to the Greek central bank and covered €4.2 billion euros of interest and principle payments to the European Central Bank. The creditors plan to wrap up talks on the terms attached to the country's new bailout by Aug. 6, and disburse the first tranche from the program to the debt-stricken country by Aug. 17, an international official with knowledge of the matter said.

Greece has to pay the ECB another €3.2 billion on Aug. 20. ECB President Mario Draghi last week joined the IMF in calling for debt relief to help the Greek economy recover but German Chancellor Angela Merkel ruled out a cut in the nominal value of the country's debt and said she's not even prepared to ease the repayment terms just yet.

“Apart from Germany, it appears that most people are in agreement that Greece needs a substantial debt writedown,” said Alan McQuaid, chief economist at Merrion Capital. “Unless they get it, it is hard to see the country surviving within the euro zone indefinitely.”

Bloomberg