Greece’s Tsipras Could Still End Up PM

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Elections have become a national sport in Greece. The country has had five different prime ministers in the last five years.  My prediction is that this number is not going to change anytime soon.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has resigned and called for new elections in a bid to consolidate his power and push through the country’s bailout deal.


Elections have become a national sport in Greece. The country has had five different prime ministers in the last five years.  My prediction is that this number is not going to change anytime soon.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has resigned and called for new elections in a bid to consolidate his power and push through the country’s bailout deal.

Odds are Tsipras will emerge a winner in the elections, expected to take place on September 20. This is not a testament to his leadership skills, but rather due to the vacuum of leadership in Greek politics. Disastrous management of the country over the last 40 years discredits opposition parties, such as New Democracy and PASOK.

Only the centrist To Potami party could emerge as a competitor to Syriza. As they say – keep your enemies close. Therefore, if Tsipras does not emerge as a clear winner to form a government on his own, I expect him to form a coalition government with To Potami.

Either way, the new elections give Tsipras another chance to get Greece’s financial house in order.

How we got here

Seven months ago, I suggested that the Greek government’s actions – or inactions – would destroy an enormous amount of value. Unfortunately, I was right.  My conservative estimate is that the average Greek employee would need to work an additional year and a half to make up for the value in the economy destroyed in the last year.

One can arrive at this conclusion by analyzing data from the Athens Stock Exchange, IMF, Bank of Greece, Eurostat, OECD, and European Commission: €30 billion was lost in government bank holdings held in the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund. Another €13 billion was lost in non-bank equity holdings. The €26 billion recorded by the IMF in non-financial assets held for privatization destroyed about €10 billion of value. The sum is €53 billion in losses.

One also needs to account for opportunity costs due to sources such as lost tax revenue and increases in unemployment benefits. This is difficult to estimate, but one simple calculation for the former would be to assume that a 5% GDP contraction would proportionately contract tax revenues by the ratio of tax revenues to GDP, which in 2013 was close to 33%. Given a GDP of €180 billion this would translate into another €3 billion of losses.

Of course, actual tax losses could be much higher if GDP losses persist for multiple years. Even ignoring this loss, as well as increases in unemployment benefits and any potential losses from the new bank recapitalization, €56 billion of losses mounted.

This amounts to €16,000 per each of Greece’s approximately 3.5 million workers.  With an average net wage close to €900, this amounts to a full 18 months of hard work.

How to undo the damage

This value destruction is reversable if Greece changes its focus.

Greece needs a turnaround, and with any turnaround strategy, focus is key. Where they sell milk or bread or whether the stores will open on Sundays, is not going to put Greece in a trajectory of growth. The IMF and the European partners are dead wrong, in my view, to focus on these issues instead of the elephant in the room.

The elephant in the room is the public sector, which has a budget of close to €80 billion and 650,000 employees.

Increasing accountability and improving governance in the public sector could have massive economic consequences because it could restore confidence and trust in the country.

A 100-day plan

Here is one 100-day plan on how to achieve this:

The Greek government can increase the transparency and management of its assets and liabilities by reporting an up-to-date balance sheet of its accounts (which is currently does not). Thus, it should adopt accrual accounting and International Public Sector Accounting Standards. Within 30 days, the government should then report its net debt position under international standards. This is much lower than the frequently reported gross debt number that uses nominal value. The former is lower than 50% of GDP while the latter is close to 180%.

The government should then relentlessly educate credit rating agencies that its net debt does not justify such a low credit rating. Having secured European Stability Mechanism financing and having such a low net debt number justifies a better credit rating. A BB credit rating would be perfectly possible within 100 days.

The government should do whatever is necessary for Greek government bonds to be included in the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing program. This will improve liquidity and set the foundation for economic growth.

With a commitment to transparency, a better credit rating and being part of ECB’s quantitative easing, my estimate is that 10-year Greek government bonds could trade close to 3% yield within 100 days. Now they trade close to 10%. This would open the doors for Greece to tap the market and issue a bond.

Within this sequence of events, it would be realistic to expect a 50% increase in the Athens Stock Exchange index leading to a gain of approximately €15 billion.  Greece used to have GDP-per-capita levels almost double that of the poorest countries in the European Union. Now it has just 20% higher than them.

New elections will give Tsipras a second opportunity to reverse that trend. Let’s hope he does not waste it again.

Tsipras’ second chance: Greece to hold elections is republished with permission from The Conversation

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