By George FriedmanFounder and Chairman
The European economic crisis has taken different forms in different
places, and Cyprus is the latest country to face the prospect of
financial ruin. Overextended banks in Cyprus are teetering on the brink
of failure for issuing loans they cannot repay, which has prompted the
tiny Mediterranean country, a member of the European Union, to turn to
Brussels for help. Late Sunday, the European Union and Cypriot president
announced new terms for a bailout that would provide the infusion of
cash necessary to prevent bankruptcies in Cyprus' banking sector and,
more important,
prevent a banking panic from spreading to the rest of Europe.
What makes this crisis different from the previous bailouts for Greece, Ireland or elsewhere are the
conditions Brussels has attached for its assistance.
Due to circumstances unique to Cyprus, namely the questionable origin
of a large chunk of the deposits in its now-stricken banking sector and
that sector's small size relative to the overall European economy, the
European Union,
led by Germany,
has taken a harder line with the country. Cyprus has few sources of
capital besides its capacity as a banking shelter, so Brussels required
that the country raise part of the necessary funds from its own banking
sector -- possibly by seizing money from certain bank deposits and
putting it toward the bailout fund. The proposal has not yet been
approved, but if enacted it would undermine a formerly sacred principle
of banking in most industrial nations -- the security of deposits --
setting a new and possibly destabilizing precedent in Europe.
Cyprus' Dilemma
For years before the crisis, Cyprus promoted itself as an offshore
financial center by creating a tax structure and banking rules that made
depositing money in the country attractive to foreigners. As a result,
Cyprus' financial sector grew to dwarf the rest of the Cypriot economy,
accounting for about eight times the country's annual gross domestic
product and employing a substantial portion of the nation's work force. A
side effect of this strategy, however, was that if the financial sector
experienced problems, the rest of the domestic economy would not be big
enough to stabilize the banks without outside help.
Europe's economic crisis spawned precisely those sorts of problems
for the Cypriot banking sector. This was not just a concern for Cyprus,
though. Even though Cyprus' banking sector is tiny relative to the rest
of Europe's, one Cypriot bank defaulting on what it owed other banks
could put the whole
European banking system in question, and the last thing the European Union needs now is a crisis of confidence in its banks.
The Cypriots were facing chaos if their banks failed because the
insurance system was insufficient to cover the claims of depositors. For
its part, the European Union could not risk the financial contagion.
But Brussels could not simply bail out the entire banking system, both
because of the precedent it would set and because the political support
for a total bailout wasn't there. This was particularly the case for
Germany, which would carry much of the financial burden and is preparing
for elections in September 2013 before an electorate that is
increasingly hostile to bailouts.
Even though the German public may oppose the bailouts, it benefits
immensely from what those bailouts preserve. As I have pointed out many
times,
Germany is heavily dependent on exports
and the European Union is critical to those exports as a free trade
zone. Although Germany also imports a great deal from the rest of the
bloc, a break in the free trade zone would be catastrophic for the
German economy. If all imports were cut along with exports, Germany
would still be devastated because what it produces and exports and what
it imports are very different things. Germany could not absorb all its
production and would experience massive unemployment.
Currently, Germany's unemployment rate is below 6 percent while
Spain's is above 25 percent. An exploding financial crisis would cut
into consumption, which would particularly hurt an export-dependent
country like Germany. Berlin's posture through much of the European
economic crisis has been to pretend it is about to stop providing
assistance to other countries, but the fact is that doing so would
inflict pain on Germany, too. Germany will make its threats and its
voters will be upset, but in the end, the country would not be enjoying
high employment if the crisis got out of hand. So the German game is to
constantly threaten to let someone sink, while in the end doing whatever
has to be done.
Cyprus was a place where Germany could show its willingness to get
tough but didn't carry any of the risks that would arise in pushing a
country such as Spain too hard, for example. Cyprus' economy was small
enough and its problems unique enough that the rest of Europe could
dismiss any measures taken against the country as a one-off. Here was a
case where the German position appears enormously more powerful than
usual. And in isolation, this is true -- if we ignore the question of
what conclusion the rest of Europe, and the world, draws from the
treatment of Cyprus.
A Firmer Line
Under German guidance, the European Union made an extraordinary
demand on the Cypriots. It demanded that a tax be placed on deposits in
the country's two largest banks. The tax would be about 10 percent and
would, under the initial terms, be applied to all accounts, regardless
of their size. This was an unprecedented solution. Since the global
financial crisis of the 1920s, all advanced industrial countries -- and
many others -- had been operating on a fundamental principle that
deposits in banks were utterly secure. They were not regarded as bonds
paying certain interest, whose value would disappear if the bank failed.
Deposits were regarded as riskless placements of money, with the risk
covered by deposit insurance for smaller deposits, but in practical
terms, guaranteed by the national wealth.
This guarantee meant that individual savings would be safe and that
working capital parked by corporations in a bank was safe as well. The
alternative was not only uncertainty, but also people hoarding cash and
preventing it from entering the financial system. It was necessary to
have a secure place to put money so that it was available for lending.
The runs on banks in the 1920s and 1930s drove home the need for total
security for deposits.
Brussels demanded that the bailout for Cypriot banks be partly paid
for by depositors in those banks. That demand essentially violated the
social contract on the
sanctity of bank deposits and
did so in a country that was a member of the European Union -- one of
the world's major economic blocs. Proponents of the measure pointed out
that many of the depositors were not Cypriot nationals but rather
foreigners, many of whom were Russian. Moreover, it was suggested that
the only reason for a Russian to be putting money in a Cypriot bank was
to get it out of Russia, and the only motive for that had to be
nefarious. It followed that the confiscation was not targeted against
ordinary people but against shady Russians.
There is no question that there are shady Russians putting money into
Cyprus. But ordinary Cypriots had their money in the same banks and so
did many Cypriot and foreign companies, including European companies,
who were doing business in Cyprus and need money for payroll and so on.
The proposal might look like an attempt to
seize Russian money,
but it would pinch the bank accounts of all Cypriots as well as a
sizable amount of legitimate Russian money. Confiscating 10 percent of
all deposits could devastate individuals and the overall economy and
likely would prompt companies operating in Cyprus to move their cash
elsewhere. The measure would have been devastating and the Cypriot
parliament rejected it.
Another deal, the one currently up for approval, tried to mitigate
the problem but still broke the social contract. Accounts smaller than
100,000 euros (about $128,000) would not be touched. However, accounts
larger than 100,000 euros would be taxed at an uncertain rate, currently
estimated at 20 percent, while bondholders would lose up to 40 percent.
These numbers will likely shift again, but assuming they are close to
the final figures, depositors putting money into banks beyond this
amount are at risk depending on the financial condition of the bank.
The impact on Cyprus is more than Russian mafia money being taxed.
All corporations doing business in Cyprus could have 20 percent of their
operating cash seized. Regardless of precisely how the Cypriot banking
system is restructured, the fact is that the European Union demanded
that Cyprus seize portions of bank accounts from large depositors. From a
business' perspective, 100,000 euros is not all that much when you are
running a supermarket or a car dealership or a construction company, but
this arbitrary level could easily be raised in the future and the mere
existence of the measure will make attracting investment more difficult.
A New Precedent
The more significant development was the fact that the European Union
has now made it official policy, under certain circumstances, to
encourage member states to seize depositors' assets to pay for the
stabilization of financial institutions. To put it simply, if you are a
business, the safety of your money in a bank depends on the bank's
financial condition and the political considerations of the European
Union. What had been a haven -- no risk and minimal returns -- now has
minimal returns and unknown risks. Brussels' emphasis that this was
mostly Russian money is not assuring, either. More than just Russian
money stands to be taken for the bailout fund if the new policy is
approved. Moreover, the point of the global banking system is that money
is safe wherever it is deposited. Europe has other money centers, like
Luxembourg, where the financial system outstrips gross domestic product.
There are no problems there right now, but as we have learned, the
European Union is an uncertain place. If Russian deposits can be seized
in Nicosia, why not American deposits in Luxembourg?
This was why it was so important to emphasize the potentially criminal nature of the
Russian deposits
and to downplay the effect on ordinary law-abiding Cypriots. Brussels
has worked very hard to make the Cyprus case seem unique and
non-replicable: Cyprus is small and its banking system attracted
criminals, so the principle that deposits in banks are secure doesn't
necessarily apply there. Another way to look at it is that an EU member,
like some other members of the bloc, could not guarantee the solvency
of its banks so Brussels forced the country to seize deposits in order
to receive help stabilizing the system. Viewed that way, the European
Union has established a new option for itself in dealing with depositors
in troubled banks, and that principle now applies to all of Europe,
particularly to those countries with financial institutions potentially
facing similar problems.
The question, of course, is whether foreign depositors in European
banks will accept that Cyprus was one of a kind. If they decide that it
isn't obvious, then foreign corporations -- and even European
corporations -- could start pulling at least part of their cash out of
European banks and putting it elsewhere. They can minimize the amount of
cash on hand in Europe by shifting to non-European banks and
transferring as needed. Those withdrawals, if they occur, could create a
massive liquidity crisis in Europe. At the very least, every reasonable
CFO will now assume that the risk in Europe has risen and that an eye
needs to be kept on the financial health of institutions where they have
deposits. In Europe, depositing money in a bank is no longer a
no-brainer.
Now we must ask ourselves why the Germans would have created this
risk. One answer is that they were confident they could convince
depositors that Cyprus was one of a kind and not to be repeated. The
other answer was that they had no choice. The first explanation was
undermined March 25, when Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem said
that the model used in Cyprus could be used in future bank bailouts.
Locked in by an electorate that does not fully understand Germany's
vulnerability, the German government decided it had to take a hard line
on Cyprus regardless of risk. Or Germany may be preparing a new strategy
for the management of the European financial crisis. The banking system
in Europe is too big to salvage if it comes to a serious crisis. Any
solution will involve the loss of depositors' money. Contemplating that
concept could lead to a run on banks that would trigger the crisis
Europe fears. Solving a crisis and guaranteeing depositors may be seen
as having impossible consequences. Setting the precedent in Cyprus has
the advantage of not appearing to be a precedent.
It's not clear what the Germans or the EU negotiators are thinking,
and all these theories are speculative. What is certain is that an EU
country, facing a crisis in its financial system, is now weighing
whether to pay for that crisis by seizing depositors' money. And with
that, the Europeans have broken a barrier that has been in place since
the 1930s. They didn't do that casually and they didn't do that because
they wanted to. But they did it.