Source: CSM
Could the tiny economy of Mediterranean Cyprus, in urgent need of a bailout package, pull the whole eurozone back into crisis?
The answer, it became clear in the past few days, is yes. And the
responsibility lies with the eurozone’s strongest economy, Germany.
For months, eurozone finance ministers have been debating how to help
Cyprus, whose banks, exposed to large amounts of bad Greek debt, are in
dire need of recapitalization. Cyprus is the fourth eurozone country to
apply for financial aid from the European Union, the European Central
Bank (ECB), and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), after Greece,
Portugal, and Ireland.
It is also by far the smallest, and the amounts needed to keep it
afloat are relatively modest, around 10 billion euros ($13 billion). So,
late last week the ministers at a meeting in Brussels finally decided
on a bailout package.
But for the first time, at the insistence of the German government,
private account holders were being asked to shoulder a part of that
bailout, around 5.8 billion euros ($7.5 billion), through a special levy
on their savings.
“The German taxpayer is willing to help Cyprus,” says Michael Fuchs, a
member of Parliament for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian
Democrats. “But the Cypriots have to help themselves and pay a tax on
their deposits.”
An ashen-faced Nicos Anastasiades, president of Cyprus, told his
fellow countrymen in a televised statement that it was either this deal
or state bankruptcy. Under the deal, people with more than 100,000 euros
in their accounts would have to pay a 9.9 percent tax, while people
with less than that would pay 6.7 percent.
Cypriots’ reactions were shocked and angry, the more so when they
realized that over the weekend accounts had been frozen and transactions
were impossible. Banks were closed today for a national holiday and
officials said they would remain closed until Thursday to prevent panic
reactions amongst customers.
Today, the Cypriot parliament was meant to approve the bailout deal.
The vote was postponed to Tuesday though when it became clear that
President Anastasiades would face defeat. MPs are particularly unhappy
about the fact that holders of small accounts should be taxed too. Angry
protests in the streets of the capital, Nicosia, lay the blame with
Germany’s government.
But German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble made it clear in an
interview on German television today that for him it was not important
where the Cypriots raised the money – as long as they did raise it.
There are two reasons for this unusual conditionality. First, German
politicians and many of their European colleagues suspect Cyprus to be a tax haven and a money-laundering site for Russian oligarchs.
Of the 68 billion euros stored in Cypriot bank accounts, around 20
billion ($26 billion) belong to Russian account holders. A report
compiled last year by the German secret service, the
Bundesnachrichtendienst, claims to have found evidence that Cypriot
banks or Russian bank branches based in Cyprus are used to launder
illegal money.
The second reason is that Germany’s ruling coalition of conservatives
and liberals is facing general elections in September, and politicians
fear accusations they are sacrificing German tax money to bail out
Russian billionaires. “There is a lot of, let’s say, difficult money in
Cypriot accounts,” says Mr. Fuchs. “We want this to be taxed.”
The question now is what the rest of the eurozone – and indeed the
international financial markets – make of the deal. The verdict seems to
be a general thumbs-down. Shares in Europe, particularly those of
banks, were down today.
And economists warn the Cypriot example could set a risky precedent.
American Nobel prize winner Paul Krugman called it a “dangerous
solution” that could cause mass withdrawals in countries like Greece and
Italy. And Peter Bofinger, a member of the so-called council of wise
men advising the German government on the economy, said in an interview
with German magazine Der Spiegel, “From now on Europe’s citizens really
have to worry about their money.”
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