We had news this week that the annual rate of real GDP growth in Greece is finally positive after two quarters of positive growth. The austerity merchants are out in force congratulating themselves on a victory. Some victory. What the official data doesn’t publish are the long-term implications of the Depression that Greece has been locked in for the last six years. I look at that question in this blog (a little). Further, despite the claims by the European Commission and the lackies that it relies on to spread its distorted economic news that Greece has achieved a primary fiscal surplus, nothing is further from the truth. The fact is that the Greek fiscal deficit expanded considerably last year and despite all the austerity is still pumping public euros into the Greek economy and therefore supporting growth. The slight return to growth is not a victory for fiscal austerity but a demonstration that if large deficits are maintained for long enough growth will eventually rear its head.



Eurostat published the preliminary estimates for the third quarter 2014 National Accounts data last week – GDP up by 0.2% in the euro area and up by 0.3% in the EU28 – which showed very weak growth overall in Europe and a further decline into recession for Italy.

I will consider that data another day.

The latest Greek National Accounts data published by the Hellenic Statistical Authority (El.Stat) came out on the same day and the El.Stat – Press Release – reported what might be considered to be good news.

The agency announced that:

Available seasonally adjusted data1 indicate that in the 3rd quarter of 2014 the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in volume terms2 increased by 0.7% in comparison with the 2nd Quarter of 2014. Available non-seasonally adjusted data indicate that in the 3rd quarter of 2014 the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in volume terms increased by 1.7% in comparison with the 3rd Quarter of 2013.

The following graph comes from the El.Stat – data – and shows annual (blue bars) and quarterly (red line) real GDP growth from the mid-1990s to the third-quarter 2014.

Unfortunately we will have to wait for the detailed expenditure breakdowns before we can find out what is driving the growth.

But the recent trends suggest that household and government consumption has risen a little in real terms but Gross Capital Formation has fallen.

Net exports had also been rising and the state of the domestic economy is so dire that imports were well below exports. Butthat position reversed around this time last year and net exports were draining growth in the first and second quarters of 2014.

Significantly, for those who want to see this as a victory for austerity you might want to think again.

According to the

Eurostat Public Finance data 2013 – the Greek government deficit remained at 12.2 per cent of GDP in 2013 (an increase of 3.6 per cent of GDP). Out of that 12.2 per cent of GDP deficit, 3.6 per cent of it related to net interest payments by the government.

So we might conclude that a primary balance of around 8.6 per cent was in place in 2013 as the growth turned positive.

That is, there was substantial fiscal support still in place whether by design or not.

Eurostat no longer published quarterly deficit figures for Greece so we cannot know for sure what the situation is right now other than a substantial fiscal deficit will be still pumping public money into the Greek economy.

Further, there has been a lot of official tinkering with the data to give the impression that the Greek government was running a primary surplus in 2013.

A primary fiscal balance is total spending minus total revenue net of all interest payments on government debt.

The issue is that the European Commission has certain tricky ways of preparing the public finance data under its Excessive Deficit Procedure. The tricks were added to by the so-called special Economic Adjustment Program for Greece – the Troika bailout.

The – Fiscal data – 2nd notification( Year 2014 ) (Provisional Data) – which is not prepared under the Excessive Deficit Procedure and the special Economic Adjustment Program for Greece shows a primary deficit of 8.2 per cent of GDP in 2013.

El.Stat report that:

The items treated in a different way under the ESA2010 rules and under the Economic Adjustment Program include revenue from the privatisation of assets, expenditures on account of transactions relating to bank recapitalisation, and revenues from transfers related to the income of euro‐area national central banks from their investment portfolio holdings of Greek Government securities

So plenty of fudge factors, which led to reports like this from Reuters (April 23, 2014) – Greek primary surplus in 2013 was 0.8 pct/GDP-Commission.

Reuters was just repeating a European Commission press release that claimed that in 2013:

Greece had a primary surplus of 0.8 percent of GDP … a result that paves the way for some form of debt relief from euro zone governments that are now the main creditors of Athens.

According to the report, Greece had satisfied the conditions demanded by the Troika before they would “consider further measures and assistance, including inter alia lower co-financing in structural funds and/or further interest rate reduction of the Greek Loan Facility, if necessary, for achieving a further credible and sustainable reduction of Greek debt-to-GDP ratio.”

The timing of that statement was just before the May European Parliament elections and was designed to keep the reality of the Greek situation under wraps.

The reality was that there was no primary surplus. Spending and revenue flows that would normally be included in the fiscal balance were shoehorned into other state accounts (for example, the pension funds) to take them out of the standard calculations.

Even though the Greek government has been in surrender monkey mode to the Troika’s demands to cut public spending and this has caused massive damage (see below) to the Greek economy and Greek society, the fact is that there is still a substantial deficit remaining.

That means that euros are being pumped into the economy from the Greek public sector every day.

At some point, once the economy has bottomed, the automatic stabilisers built into the fiscal policy parameters will start to support the base level of economic activity.

The growth is weak and is being supported by that on-going daily fiscal deficit. Given the state of the economy, the deficit is many times too small. But deficits by definition mean that the government is providing net financial assets to the non-government sector which help growth – much to the chagrin of the bullies in Brussels, Frankfurt and Washington.

But I wouldn’t want to leave you with the impression that I think things are heading in the right direction.

Consider the following graph which shows total employment in Greece in thousands from the March-quarter 2001 to the June-quarter 2014 (blue solid line). This is the data drawn from the quarterly labour force survey conducted by the Hellenic Statistical Authority (El.Stat) – Labour Force data.

The peak employment level was 4639.6 thousand achieved in the September-quarter 2008. Then the sudden drop occurred as the Troika closed in on the Greek government and the politicians became surrender monkeys when the pressure was put on them.

Between the peak quarter (September 2008) and the trough quarter (December 2013), Greece lost 1,159.7 thousand jobs or 25 per cent of their total employment base.

Unemployment rose by 973.2 thousand (27.8 per cent) from 364 thousand (7.3 per cent).

That is just one measure of the hideous damage that the austerity imposed on the population. They could have avoided most of that had they left the Eurozone or never joined in the first place.

The blue dotted line is the product of the following mental exercise. Suppose that total employment in Greece grows steadily from this point forward (latest data is for June-quarter 2014) at the average quarterly rate of growth that was achieved between the March-quarter 2001 and the peak September-quarter 2008.

That average was 0.3 per cent per quarter. The blue dotted line then simulated total employment growing steadily at that rate – note it is the same slope as the earlier growth period without the little real-world wobbles.

The end of the extrapolation is the June-quarter 2034. Why did I choose that end-point? Simple: it is the point where total employment would once again equal the September-quarter 2008 peak.

It means that even under favourable growth conditions (which were evident before the crisis), it will take Greece another 20 years from now to regain the employment lost by the imposed policy austerity.

And by then the population will have continued to grow modestly. The average labour force growth over the 2001-2008 period was 0.2 per cent. So employment growth before the crisis was slightly faster than the underlying population growth which allowed the unemployment rate to fall slightly.

Assuming the labour force growth matched its previous average, then by 2034, when employment finally catches up with where it was in the September-quarter 2008, unemployment will still be 956.6 thousand or 17.1 per cent of the labour force.

These numbers are not wild guesses and they are on the optimistic end of the scale. It could be that the situation in Greece remains so dire that labour force growth doesn’t occur (it is currently negative) as people leave the nation looking for opportunities elsewhere.

But what these numbers tell you is that in the scales of ‘recovery’ that organisations such as the IMF or the European Commission predict will occur over the next several years, there will be very little beneficial effects delivered to the population.

Given employment growth is unlikely to be as high as it was pre-crisis, the situation will remain worse than this simulation might suggest.

Unemployment will remain very high for decades.

Is being able to have a euro in your pocket worth that sort of sustained income loss? I cannot construct any situation where you could possible answer yes to that question.

Those bond yields again

The Bank of Greece published data on – Government Bond Yields.

Here is there complete history of Greek government 10-year bond yields (from March 1999 to October 2014). The graph shows monthly averages.

Daily data provided by the ECB – provides a comparison of Greece’s 10-year bond yields with those of Germany, France and the other PIIGS over the last year.

Things have really changed in the last month and particularly the last week. Yesterday, the 10-year bond yield for Greece jumped sharply to 8.369 per cent from 8.1 per cent.

The UK Guardian – reported – that the yields have risen because there is now renewed uncertainty about the relationship between the Troika and the Greek government, with respect to the capacity of the latter to implement the rest of the austerity plan.

Apparently, the Troika bullies (so-called auditors) are threatening to abandon the process underpinning “the final quarterly review”, which would have given the Government more credit.

They claim that the actual fiscal position of the Greek government is “almost three times the €1bn the government estimates” and there hasn’t been enough deregulation, pension cuts and sacking of public servants.

The Troika want the government to cut a further €2.5 billion from net public spending, which would almost certainly kill of the modicum of growth that is currently visible.

This is at the same time as the ECB has said they will not undertake any “debt-restructuring” of Greek bonds.

And still the Groupthink continues

The PEW – Global Attitudes Survey – Spring 2014 – however, reveals that Europeans have still not grasped the basis of their problems.

This graph taken from the Report (page 18) suggest that “declining public trust in the European project and EU institutions has bottomed out and now seems to be rebounding in a number of countries”.

Okay, and what about this graph, which shows that “the commitment of most Europeans to their single currency remains strong”.

PEW reports (page 21) that:

Sentiment for keeping the euro and not returning to their previous national currency has actually strengthened over the past year in Germany (72%, up from 66%) and remains virtually unchanged in Greece (69%), Spain (68%) and France (64%). Only in Italy has there been a serious erosion in the euro’s appeal, with the desire to keep the single currency falling from 64% to 45%. Italians are now divided on whether to stay in the euro area or to exit it and return to using the lira. This is the first time euro support has fallen below 50% in any of the five euro area countries surveyed since 2010.

So perhaps my hope that it will be Italy that demonstrates the leadership necessary to end this madness (by exiting) still has some prospect.

But it looks pretty grim.

The problem of stagnation and high unemployment in Europe is not structural. It is due to a lack of spending overall.

The private sector is clearly spending what they consider to be sustainable at this point in time. That is not sufficient – obviously – to generate growth commensurate with low unemployment.

The solution is more public spending and/or lower tax rates – that is, higher deficits. I was at a dinner the other night and was asked how higher should deficits in Europe be and my rough rule of thumb is in places like Greece about 2.5 to 3 times higher. Elsewhere a little less than that.

The euro is the problem and the ridiculous fiscal rules parading as the Stability and Growth Pact just make it worse. The SGP provides no stability nor growth. What a farce!

Conclusion

I am off to Italy for a few days from tomorrow to speak at the – How Can We Govern Europe – Roundtable.

I expect to be in a small minority of speakers (perhaps the only one) advocating the dismantling of the Eurozone and a return to national currencies.

The Greek experience tells me that it is the only way for nations to achieve sustained material prosperity. The structure of the Eurozone is biased to stagnation and entrenched high unemployment rates.

As a result of travels, my blog may be a bit patchy in frequency while I am away.

Eurozone book update

My English publisher – Edward Elgar – will publish my book – Eurozone Dystopia: Groupthink and Denial on a Grand Scale – in May 2015.

The front cover will feature this picture:



The publisher has sent me the short description of the book that will be on the back dust jacket:

Eurozone Dystopia traces the origin of the Eurozone and shows how the historical Franco-German rivalry combined with the growing dominance of neo-liberal economic thinking to create a monetary system that was deeply flawed and destined to fail. William Mitchell argues that the political class in Europe is trapped in a destructive groupthink. Based on a flawed understanding of macroeconomic fundamentals, groupthink extols the virtues of the erroneous concept of the self-regulating free market and prevents Europe from seeing its own policy failures. As a result millions are unemployed, with imperiled member states caught in a cycle of persistent stagnation and rising social instability. Providing a detailed historical analysis of the evolution of the Eurozone and its failings from the 1940s to the present day, the book argues that the Eurozone lacks the necessary monetary architecture, particularly the existence of a federal fiscal function which could have resolved the economic crisis quickly. The author examines the options available to Europe and concludes that an orderly abandonment of the euro and a return to national currencies is the superior option available. The justification for this conclusion is exhaustively argued within a Modern Monetary Theory framework. This thoughtful and accessible account of Europe’s economic woes will appeal to all those who are seeking an explanation for the crisis and are receptive to sensible and credible alternatives to the current scenario.

I am meeting the Italian publisher in Rome next Monday to discuss the situation with the foreign language versions.

That is enough for today!

(c) Copyright 2014 William Mitchell. All Rights Reserved.