Bertelsmann Foundation warns of extensive domino effects: Greece's Withdrawal from the Eurozone Could Cause Global Economic Crisis ...

Bertelsmann: 
"Οικονομικός Αρμαγεδώνας 7,9 τρισ. ευρώ στον πλανήτη αν χαθεί η Ελλάδα"


Greece's exit from the Euro would have dramatic consequences

Greece's Withdrawal from the Eurozone Could Cause Global Economic Crisis

Bertelsmann Foundation warns of extensive domino effects

Greece's exit from the Euro bears the risk of kindling a wildfire throughout Europe - possibly even on an international level - and may result in a worldwide economic crisis. Countries affected would include not only Southern member states and their EU partners, but also the USA, China and other emerging countries. This is the conclusion of an economic forecast study carried out by Prognos AG on behalf of the German Bertelsmann Stiftung. The study analyses the financial consequences of different exit scenarios covering a “Grexit” as well as a secession of different groups of crisis-stricken countries from the Euro. For the first time, the paper also calculates possible declines in growth for Germany as well as for 42 of the most important industrial and emerging countries until the year 2020 if one of its four scenarios should become reality. The authors of the study are seriously concerned by these findings.
For Greece, the exit scenario would imply national insolvency, a massive devaluation of the new Greek currency, unemployment, sharply declining domestic demand and many other problems. All these domestic effects would have a direct impact on its trading partners. In Greece alone, the ensuing losses of growth would amount to 164 billion euros or 14,300 euros per capita by the year 2020. The 42 top national economies in the world would have to absorb total losses amounting to 674 billion euros in total.
Since, however, a “Grexit” might seriously put at stake the Eurozone membership of other crisis-ridden countries in the EU’s South, the study also calculates the economic impact of three more far-reaching exit scenarios. In the event of an additional EU secession of Portugal, for example, this would mean a loss of 225 billion euros for Germany by 2020 and necessary debt write-offs amounting to 99 billion euros. Globally accumulated losses in growth would add up to 2.4 trillion euros at this point, of which the USA would have to bear 365 and China 275 billion euros respectively. With this scenario, per capita losses in income in Germany would total 2,790 euros over eight years.
"In the current situation we have to make sure that the crisis in Europe does not turn into a wildfire", warns Aart De Geus, Chairman and CEO of the Bertelsmann Foundation's Executive Board. The market uncertainties resulting from a Greek or Portuguese exit would dramatically increase the risk premium to be paid by the already highly debt-burdened economies of Spain and Italy which could directly spur a further erosion of the Eurozone. Even if we only considered the domestic burden resulting for these countries from a Eurozone withdrawal, De Geus says, this would already reach the limits of what the EU is capable to bear as a community of solidarity.
The scenario would become much more threatening if an exit of Spain is taken into the equation. If Spain would join the group of countries leaving the Eurozone, declines in growth in Germany would increase to 850 billion euros by 2020, with outstanding debts of 266 billion euros being waived. In the USA, it would mean a loss of growth to the extent of 1.2 trillion euros and in the 42 countries under review it would result in losses of 7.9 trillion euros. The accumulated per capita losses would also soar up in this scenario. The result would be a loss of 10,500 euros per capita over eight years by 2020 for Germany, a loss of 3,700 euros in the USA and as much as 18,200 euros in France and 16,000 euros in Spain respectively.
In the worst case, the situation would totally run out of control if the Euro crisis were to reach the point where Italy would have to secede from the Eurozone, too: Germany would be giving up 1.7 trillion euros and would have to write off 455 billion euros. In this scenario economic losses in Germany with more than 21,000 euros per capita would be even higher than in the exiting countries: Greece would lose 15,000 euros per capita, Portugal and Italy nearly 17,000 euros and Spain 20,500 euros. Another effect would be a dramatic increase of unemployment: only in Germany the number of unemployed rise for more than a million by the year 2015.
This scenario would eventually lead to severe international recession and global economic crisis. By 2020, growth losses in the countries under review would reach a total of 17.2 trillion euros. In absolute terms, France would suffer from the highest losses at this point (2.9 trillion euros), followed by the USA (2.8 trillion euros), China (1.9 trillion euros) and Germany (1.7 trillion euros).
In their overall assessment, the authors of the study come to the conclusion that an isolated exit of Greece and an insolvency of this Eurozone country might well be something that the EU could cope with from a merely economic point of view. At the same time, however, it is extremely difficult to assess if and to what extent this might trigger a wave of further Eurozone exits in Europe’s South. If so, the implications for the global economy could be devastating. The deep recession which might result from a series of Eurozone secessions would not stop at the borders of the European Union but also heavily affect other economies. Apart from these economic risks, particularly those countries leaving the Eurozone would be confronted with escalating social tensions and political instabilities. Therefore, the risk that a Grexit and an insolvency of the Greek government might turn into an economic, political and social conflagration spreading all over Europe and beyond is looming so large from the authors’ perspective that, according to them, the international community of states – not only the European ones – should take all efforts necessary to prevent this development.

About the study: 
The calculations are based on Prognos AG's econometric VIEW model, which is able to reproduce the national economies of 42 industrial and emerging economies on the basis of empirical data over an extensive period of time and in great detail. For comparison purposes, uniform exit assumptions or estimates were used to calculate the exit costs of the four countries Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy. Thus, for all countries a 60 per cent haircut was assumed for private as well as public creditors and a 50 per cent devaluation of the newly introduced currencies in the exit countries compared to the euro.

News Item
Gütersloh/Brüssel, 
17/10/2012
http://www.bertelsmann-stiftung.de/cps/rde/xchg/SID-2D05B7F9-C0A478B7/bst_engl/hs.xsl/269.htm


Σ Χ Ε Τ Ι Κ Α :
(1)
Bertelsmann: 
"Οικονομικός Αρμαγεδώνας 7,9 τρισ. ευρώ στον πλανήτη αν χαθεί η Ελλάδα"!
Ένας οικονομικος Αρμαγεδώνας θα έπληττε τον πλανήτη σε περίπτωση που η Ελλάδα εγκατέλειπε την ευρωζώνη, σύμφωνα με έκθεση του ινστιτούτου Bertelsmann. Έτσι λοιπόν, ενδεχόμενη έξοδος της Ελλάδας από την ευρωζώνη θα προκαλούσε αλυσιδωτή αντίδραση στις παγκίσμιες αγορές και μια νέα οικονομική κρίση που αυτή του 2008 θα έμοιαζε με "άσκηση σε οικονομικό Πανεπιστημίου"!

Σε έκθεσή του το έγκυρο γερμανικό Ινστιτούτο προβλέπει ότι η φωτιά της ελληνικής εξόδου από την ευρωζώνη, δεν θα έμενε στις χώρες του ευρωπαϊκού Νότου, ούτε σν στην ευρωζώνη, αλλά θα επεκτεινόταν άμεσα στις Ηνωμένες Πολιτείες και από εκεί στην Κίνα σε ένα ντόμινο που όμοίο του δεν θα είχε δει ο πλανήτης από το κραχ του 1929!

Η έξοδος της Ελλάδας από την ευρωζώνη θα προκαλούσε στην Ελλάδα στάση πληρωμών, μία τεράστια υποτίμηση του νέου εθνικού νομίσματος, ανεργία, δραστική μείωση της ζήτησης και της καταναλωτικής δαπάνες και άλλα οικονομικά προβλήματα που θα είχαν άμεση επίπτωση στους ευρωπαίους εταίρους. Και αν η Ελλάδα κάποια στιγμή μετά από 1-2 χρόνια μπορούσε μέσω των διαδοχικων υποτιμήσεων να ξαναγίνει ελκυστική στις νέες επενδύσεις και να βελτίωνε τις επιδόσεις στης στις εξαγωγές, εκτός Ελλάδος θα είχαμε επιπτώσεις πυρηνικού ατυχήματος.

Οι απώλειες μόνο για τις χώρες του ευρωπαϊκού Νότου θα έφταναν τα 164 δισ. ευρώ ή 14.300 ευρώ ανά πολίτη έως το 2020, την ώρα που οι 42 μεγαλύτερες οικονομίες του πλανήτη θα έπρεπε να απορροφήσουν συνολικές απώλειες 674 δισ. ευρώ. Αλλά αυτό είναι μόνο η αρχή: Από εκεί και πέρα οι απώλιες αυτές θα προκαλούσαν δευτερογενή αποτελέσματα στην πραγματική οικονομία που θα μπορούσαν να φτάσουν τα 2 τρισ. ευρώ μέσα σε ένα χρόνο και 7,8 τρισ. ευρώ μέχρι το 2020!

Επίσης η έξοδος της Ελλάδας, υποστηρίζει το Bertelsmann, πιθανώς θα «άνοιγε την πόρτα» της Πορτογαλίας, ενώ το σενάριο γίνεται ακόμη πιο δραματικό αν έβγαινε ακολούθως από το ευρώ και η Ισπανία.

Μόνο η Γερμανία θα έχανε από την ανάπτυξη 850 δισ. ευρώ μέχρι το 2020, ενώ θα διαγράφονταν και χρέος ύψους 266 δισ. ευρώ.

Στις ΗΠΑ, οι απώλειες θα άγγιζαν το 1,2 τρισ. ευρώ, ενώ οι 42 μεγαλύτερες οικονομίες του πλανήτη θα έπρεπε να απορροφήσουν συνολικές απώλειες 7,9 τρισ. ευρώ.

Οι κατά κεφαλήν απώλειες θα έφταναν τα 10.500 ευρώ έως το 2020 στη Γερμανία, απώλεια 3.700 ευρώ στις ΗΠΑ και μέχρι και 18.200 ευρώ στη Γαλλία.

Βέβαια, η κατάσταση θα έβγαινε τελείως εκτός ελέγχου, αν η κρίση του ευρώ έφτανε στο σημείο όπου η Ιταλία θα έπρεπε επίσης να εγκαταλείψει την Ευρωζώνη: Η Γερμανία θα έχανε 1,7 τρισ. ευρώ και θα ήταν αναγκασμένη να διαγράψει χρέη ύψους 455 δισεκατομμύρια ευρώ.

Στη μακρινή Κίνα οι απώλειες θα άγγιζαν το 1,9 τρισ. ευρώ και στις ΗΠΑ τα 2,8 τρισ. ευρώ. Το συμπέρασμα της έκθεσης είναι προφανές: μια αρχικά απομονωμένη έξοδος της Ελλάδας και της εθνικής χρεοκοπίας της ενδεχομένως να μπορούσε να αντιμετωπιστεί, αλλά το αποτέλεσμα θα ήταν η παγκόσμια οικονομία να εισέλθει σε μια βαθιά ύφεση καθώς οι επιπτώσεις της είναι δύσκολο να υπολογιστούν και η ύφεση δεν θα σταματούσε σε καμία περίπτωση μόνο στην Ευρώπη.

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(2)
'Devastating Impact' Euro Exit by Southern Nations Could Cost 17 Trillion Euros


Protesters holding the flags of Greece and Portugal during an anti-austerity demonstration in the Portuguese city of Porto in September. Zoom
AP
Protesters holding the flags of Greece and Portugal during an anti-austerity demonstration in the Portuguese city of Porto in September.

A new study by a German think tank warns that a euro exit by Greece, Spain, Portugal and Italy would cut global GDP by 17 trillion euros and plunge the world into recession, with France suffering the biggest loss. A Greek exit alone would be manageable, but must be avoided to forestall a domino effect, it says.

A Greek euro exit on its own would have a relatively minor impact on the world economy, but if it causes a chain reaction leading to the departure of other southern European nations from the single currency, the economic impact on the world would be devastating, a German study warned on Wednesday.
Economic research group Prognos, in a study commissioned by the Bertelsmann Stiftung, estimated that euro exits by Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy would wipe a total of €17.2 trillion ($22.3 trillion) off worldwide growth by 2020.
The researchers arrived at a particularly bleak assessment because they didn't just calculate the losses of creditors who had lent money to the crisis-hit nations. They also analyzed the possible impact of a euro collapse on economic growth in the 42 most important industrial and emerging economies that make up more than 90 percent of the world economy.



Using an econometric model, Prognos first calculated the effect of a Greek euro exit, and then simulated the step-by-step fallout from Portugal, Spain and Italy abandoning the currency as well.


Chain Reaction Could Be 'Devastating'
"In their overall assessment, the authors of the study come to the conclusion that an isolated exit of Greece and an insolvency of this euro-zone country might well be something that the EU could cope with from a merely economic point of view," the Bertelsmann Stiftung said in a statement.
"At the same time, however, it is extremely difficult to assess if and to what extent this might trigger a wave of further euro-zone exits in Europe's south. If so, the implications for the global economy could be devastating."
A Greek exit on its own would lead to a loss of gross domestic product (GDP) totalling €164 billion, or €14,300 per capita, by 2020 through devaulation of the new currency, unemployment and a sharp fall in domestic demand, the researchers calculated.

It would cost Germany €64 billion in lost credit and €73 billion in lost economic growth between 2013 and 2020, the study said. But that only amounts to 2.9 percent of German GDP.
The impact of other countries leaving the currency union would be more dramatic:

  • If Portugal went, Germany would lose €225 billion by 2020 and would have to write off credit amounting to €99 billion. Global losses in growth would add up to €2.4 trillion, with the US having to bear €365 billion and China €275 billion, respectively.
  • If Spain were to go as well, Germany would lose €850 billion in GDP by 2020 and would have to waive €266 billion of credit. The US would lose €1.2 trillion in GDP, and the 42 countries under review would lose €7.9 trillion.
  • If Italy, the euro zone's third largest economy, were to leave, "the situation would run totally out of control," the study said. It estimated that Germany would lose €1.7 trillion in GDP and would have to write off €455 billion in credit. German unemployment would increase by more than one million by 2015. There would be a "severe international recession and global economic crisis," the Bertelsmann Stiftung writes. The biggest losers would be France, followed by the US, China and Germany.

"In the current situation we have to make sure that the crisis in Europe does not turn into a wildfire," warned Aart De Geus, Chairman of the Bertelsmann Stiftung's executive board.
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ΤΟ ΚΕΙΜΕΝΟ ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΕΤΑΙ ΣΤΗΝ ΙΣΤΟΣΕΛΙΔΑ:
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/study-warns-euro-exit-of-southern-nations-could-cost-17-trillion-euros-a-861775.html