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Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists Volvemos a Puerto Rico May 22-25, 2015 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)60. Cyprus, Seriously Paul Krugman MARCH 2013
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/26/cyprus-seriously/
A correspondent whom I respect has (gently) challenged me to say plainly what I think Cyprus should do leaving aside all questions about political realism. And hes right: while I think its OK to spend most of my time on this blog working within the limits of the politically possible, and relying on a combination of reason and ridicule to push out those limits over time, once in a while I should just flatly state what I would do if given a chance.
So here it is: yes, Cyprus should leave the euro. Now.
The reason is straightforward: staying in the euro means an incredibly severe depression, which will last for many years while Cyprus tries to build a new export sector. Leaving the euro, and letting the new currency fall sharply, would greatly accelerate that rebuilding.
If you look at Cypruss trade profile, you see just how much damage the country is about to sustain. This is a highly open economy with just two major exports, banking services and tourism and one of them just disappeared. This would lead to a severe slump on its own. On top of that, the troika is demanding major new austerity, even though the country supposedly has rough primary (non-interest) budget balance. I wouldnt be surprised to see a 20 percent fall in real GDP.
Whats the path forward? Cyprus needs to have a tourist boom, plus a rapid growth of other exports my guess would be agriculture as a driver, although I dont know much about it. The obvious way to get there is through a large devaluation; yes, in the end this probably does come down to cheap deals that attract lots of British package tours...
AS WE ALL KNOW, THIS DIDN'T HAPPEN, MAKING KRUGMAN'S SCORE A PERFECT ZERO...
A correspondent whom I respect has (gently) challenged me to say plainly what I think Cyprus should do leaving aside all questions about political realism. And hes right: while I think its OK to spend most of my time on this blog working within the limits of the politically possible, and relying on a combination of reason and ridicule to push out those limits over time, once in a while I should just flatly state what I would do if given a chance.
So here it is: yes, Cyprus should leave the euro. Now.
The reason is straightforward: staying in the euro means an incredibly severe depression, which will last for many years while Cyprus tries to build a new export sector. Leaving the euro, and letting the new currency fall sharply, would greatly accelerate that rebuilding.
If you look at Cypruss trade profile, you see just how much damage the country is about to sustain. This is a highly open economy with just two major exports, banking services and tourism and one of them just disappeared. This would lead to a severe slump on its own. On top of that, the troika is demanding major new austerity, even though the country supposedly has rough primary (non-interest) budget balance. I wouldnt be surprised to see a 20 percent fall in real GDP.
Whats the path forward? Cyprus needs to have a tourist boom, plus a rapid growth of other exports my guess would be agriculture as a driver, although I dont know much about it. The obvious way to get there is through a large devaluation; yes, in the end this probably does come down to cheap deals that attract lots of British package tours...
AS WE ALL KNOW, THIS DIDN'T HAPPEN, MAKING KRUGMAN'S SCORE A PERFECT ZERO...
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