Larry Elliott, il responsabile della pagina economica del
Guardian, lo chiama così: il
Sarajevo moment. Non è una bella profezia, ovvio. Il concetto è che si rischia di sottovalutare le conseguenze del Grexit, come si sottovalutarono le conseguenze dell'attentato di Sarajevo nel giugno 1914, 101 anni fa. Ecco un estratto del suo articolo di domani.
A fully fledged monetary union has the means to
transfer resources from one region to another. This is what happens in
the US or the UK, for example, with higher taxes in areas that are doing
well being redistributed to areas with slower growth and higher
unemployment.
The euro, however, was constructed along different
lines. Countries were allowed to join even though it was clear they
would struggle to compete with the better performing nations such as
Germany. A stability and growth pact designed to ensure a common set of
budget controls was a poor substitute for fiscal union. From the start,
it was obvious that the only mechanism for a country that ran into
severe difficulties would be harsh austerity.
Greece is the result of what happens when politics is allowed to override economics.
If Greece leaves, the idea that the euro is
irrevocable is broken. Any government that runs into difficulties in the
future will have the Greek option of devaluation as an alternative to
endless austerity. Just as importantly, the financial markets will know
that, and will pile pressure on countries that look vulnerable. That’s
why Greece represents an existential crisis for the eurozone.
It will be said in response that Greece is a
small, insignificant country and that the single currency has much
better defences than it had at the last moment of acute trouble in the
summer of 2012. Diplomats in Europe’s capitals took very much the same
view in late June 1914.
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