By Cristina Lindblad
Those
who favor Greece’s exit from the euro like to argue that the transition from
Europe’s single currency back to the drachma, or some newfangled scrip, need
not devolve into chaos. In a 53-page paper titled “A Primer on the Euro Breakup: Default, Exit and Devaluation as the
Optimal Solution,” Jonathan
Tepper says that “during the past century 69 countries have exited currency
areas with little downward economic volatility.” Tepper, the chief economist at
the London-based research firm Variant Perception, cites the partition of India
and Pakistan in 1947 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the 1990s among
examples. He also refers to Argentina’s default and devaluation in 2001-2002,
which has become a preferred case study on how a nation can not just survive
the process of exiting a currency union, but also prosper from it.