The Greek Civil War. Old against Young.
By Daily Collateral
New Democracy. Syriza. Doesn't matter.
According to Citi's senior political analyst Tina Fordham, chief economist
Willem Buiter, and global economist Ebrahim Rahbari, "any new Greek
government, regardless of its composition, will struggle with implementation
challenges related to the imposition of further austerity measures demanded by
the Troika in exchange for further assistance," and as a result, they
"consider it likely that a new troika deal would ultimately fall apart and
lead to Grexit."
Citi notes that there is growing sense among European leaders that
"promotion of economic growth can no longer be subordinated completely,
even in fiscally unsustainable euro area member states, to the requirements of
fiscal austerity," but no one has any idea what that means.
This seems to be the current thinking, according to Citi:
The only operational, practical consensus on growth is that austerity policies should not be unnecessarily pro-cyclical. If a deficit target is overshot because of bad luck (economic activity and government revenues are weaker than expected despite full adherence to all conditionality) rather than bad faith (there has been a failure to implement agreed measures or policies), the shortfall will not have to be made up immediately – in the original time frame. More time will be given to achieve the original objectives without the need for deeper and faster austerity than originally envisaged. Bad faith (non-compliance) will, for incentive-compatibility or moral hazard reasons, continue to be punished with demand for enhanced and faster austerity.























