By Biagio Bossone and Marco Cattaneo
As time goes by without Greece coming to terms with its creditors,
chances are that Athens will soon be bound to issue a parallel domestic
currency. This could happen in at least two different forms, each with deeply
different implications.
Greece could issue IOUs, that is, promises to pay euros to the bearer in
some future date. These IOUs would be nothing else than euro denominated debt
obligations, and would be issued and used to replace scarce euro for public payment purposes.
This type of currency would likely resolve in an unstable solution, and
the reason is threefold: (i) with IOUs, the Greek government would be issuing
additional euro-denominated debt without any hint as to how it will be able to
reimburse them, (ii) replacing euro payments for public salaries and pensions
with IOU disbursements would be the same as announcing publicly that Greece
cannot stay in the Eurozone, and (iii) neither aggregate demand nor GDP
expansion would be achieved.
The alternative would be to issue Tax Credit Certificates (TCC) and
assign them to workers and enterprises at no charge. TCC would entitle the
bearer to a tax reduction of an equivalent amount maturing in, say, two years
after issuance. Such entitlements could be liquidated in exchange for euros and
used for spending purposes. Liquidation of TCC would take place against
purchases of TCC by those who would provide euros in exchange for the right to
the future tax cuts.
TCC assignments would supplement disposable
incomes and thus stimulate demand. As an example, by issuing TCC the Greek
government could increase net monthly salaries by paying, say, 1.000 euros plus 100 TCC instead of just 1.000 euros;
reduce gross labor costs by assigning, say, 200 TCC to each domestic employer
who pays a monthly salary (gross of taxes and social costs) of 2.000 euros; and
fund humanitarian actions, job guarantee programs, and the like.
The TCC option is based on a very different idea than that underpinning
the IOU. Unlike the latter, the TCC option introduces a stimulus that expands
demand and triggers economic recovery. As long as the total amount of
circulating TCC is not too large as a percentage of GDP and gross government fiscal
revenue, TCC will be valuable and well accepted by the general public, and will
trade at not too high a discount vis-à-vis the euro.
The TCC option would be a superior solution than the IOU, and would
allow Greece to remain in the
Eurozone, while increasing citizens’ purchasing power, reducing domestic labor
costs, and boosting GDP growth. This would also generate, in due course, higher
gross tax receipts (which would offset the shortfall in euro fiscal revenue due
to TCC issuance).
If, as it appears to be the case, Greece had problems in repaying
short-term debt installments to the ECB, the IMF and Eurozone partners, it
should unilaterally and immediately announce: (i) the implementation of the TCC
program, (ii) a commitment to generate a euro primary surplus (euro receipts
less euro payments, TCC disbursements not included) of, say, 1% of GDP in 2015
and 3% of GDP from 2016 onward, and (iii) a proposal for a new repayment
schedule, which could presumably be limited to spreading the 2015 debt
repayments through 2016-2018.
The EU and ECB might not like the TCC option,
oppose it, and take such action as suspending the Emergency Liquidity
Assistance to the Greek banking sector. But this would precipitate the Grexit,
which is precisely what everybody wants to avoid. It would be unwise for this
to happen. It appears unlikely, too.
In the first case you'll have a run on the euro and then a social extremist turmoils. The second one (TCC) will burst a big and long stagflaction. And this is not end of the story because the entire Eurozone will be in danger.
RispondiEliminaThe TCC avenue will trigger a powerful recovery, raise inflation towards the appropriate 2% level and stabilize the financial system.
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