What is it about the islands around Europe's periphery?
Is there some peculiar psychological thing about proximity plus the
illusion of isolation that makes them turn themselves into havens for
runaway banks? Inquiring minds want to know.
Anyway, Cyprus's story has obvious parallels with both Iceland's and
Ireland's, with R.M.M.L. — Russian mobster money laundering — as an
extra ingredient. All three island nations had a run of rapid growth as
their status as banking havens left them with banking systems that were
too big to save. Iceland, at peak, had banks with assets that equaled
980 percent of gross domestic product; Ireland was at 440 percent.
Cyprus, at around 800 percent, was closer to Iceland in this respect.
In all three instances, runaway banking was the source of the crisis —
although not everyone seems to get this, even now. In any case, the
question is what to do about it.
Iceland got through the crisis with less damage than Ireland, for two
reasons. First, it let its banks default on liabilities to overseas
creditors, including deposits in offshore accounts. Second, it had the
flexibility that comes from having your own currency.
Iceland's currency advantage helped the real adjustment of the
economy; it also allowed some fairly undisruptive financial repression,
because the depreciation of the krona (coupled with temporary capital
controls) led to a brief burst of inflation that eroded the real value
of deposits. Savers were hurt — but with banks having grown to 10 times
the G.D.P., that was going to happen one way or another.
Cyprus, unfortunately, seems to be making a hash of it. To be fair,
the proposed levy on depositors was actually smaller than the real
losses Icelandic depositors took (and they lost on their currency
holdings too). But this is just the beginning! Even with the effective
default on deposits, Cyprus will need a huge loan from the troika — the
European Central Bank, the European Commission and the International
Monetary Fund — and the condition for this loan will be harsh austerity.
This looks like the beginning of endless, inconceivable pain.
The Russians Are Coming!
The Russians Are Coming!
How big a deal is the Russian factor in Cyprus's crisis? Pretty big,
it seems. Over at the Financial Times, the financial blogger Izabella
Kaminska reported on some estimates indicating that 19 billion euros in
Russian nationals' deposits are in Cyprus banks, which is more than the
country's G.D.P. While I'm not expert in this area, I wonder whether
this is an understatement; given what we think we know about the nature
of much of this Russian money, is all of it really being declared as
Russian?
Let me make a broader point: We've now seen three island nations
around Europe become huge international banking hubs relative to their
G.D.P.'s, then get into crisis because their domestic economies don't
have the resources to bail out those metastasized banking systems if
something goes wrong. This strongly suggests, to me at least, that we
have a fundamental problem with the whole architecture (to use the
preferred fancy word) of international finance.
As long as you haven't bought into the Barney-Frank-did-it school of
thought, you realize that the global crisis of 2008 was in a fundamental
sense made possible by the erosion of effective bank regulation. As the
economist Gary Gorton has documented, there was a 70-year "quiet
period" after the Great Depression in which advanced countries had very
few major financial flare-ups; Mr. Gorton argues, and most of us agree,
that the key to this quietness was a constrained, regulated financial
system that also limited the opportunities for excessive nonbank
leverage.
But this regulation in turn depended, to an important extent, on
limited international capital flows; otherwise regulations made in
Washington or elsewhere would have been bypassed via havens like, well,
Cyprus. And once those capital controls began to be lifted in the 1970s
we entered an era of ever-bigger financial crises, starting in Latin
America, then moving to Asia, and finally striking the whole world.
So what are we going to do about this? Cyprus, as a euro-zone
country, should really be part of a euro-wide safety net buttressed by
appropriate regulation; it's insane to imagine that the euro can be run
indefinitely and merely with national deposit insurance. But euro-area
deposit insurance doesn't seem to be in the cards — and anyway, there
are plenty of other potential Cypruses out there.
All of which raises the question: Is the era of free capital movement
just a bubble, fated to end one of these years, maybe soon?
For source go here.
Of course it's the bankers, like it's always been! Along with the central american bank, ever since it was created, the influential bankers have been experimenting and creating cases. Like all XXth-century collapses - first good examples of that.
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