Germans Want Greece Out of Eurozone
		
		
	 

 vogliono anche l'Italia fuori....
RAUS!!!!
Some in Germany Want Greece to Temporarily Exit the Euro Zone
     By JACK EWING AND LIZ ALDERMAN Published: August 10, 2011    
FRANKFURT — If the 
European debt crisis  were an old survival movie, there would be a scene in which the  passengers in a lifeboat realize that they don’t have enough food and  water for everyone and that someone needs to go over the side. We’re  looking at you, Greece. 
 In fact, that is the sentiment that a growing number of reputable  economists and other commentators, particularly from fully liquid  Germany, have been expressing lately.        
 Greece, they say, should leave 
the euro  zone for its own good, as well as the Continent’s. 
Some German  economists argue that others in the 17-nation currency union, like  Portugal or even Italy, might need to leave as well.        
 “It is better for all concerned, in particular for Greece, if the  country leaves the euro temporarily,” Hans-Werner Sinn, president of the  influential Ifo Institute at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich,  wrote in an essay published two weeks ago.        
 Continuing to throw money at Greece will only reduce incentives for the  country to restructure its economy, he and other experts say, while  pushing Europe toward a so-called transfer union, where strong countries  must prop up weaker ones.        
 Meanwhile, Germany’s attitudes draw plenty of publicity in Greece and  other stricken euro countries, where they 
feed stereotypes of arrogant,  domineering Germans and stoke the resentments that are already deeply  straining European unity.        
 There is no provision in European Union law for a member to be ejected,  according to legal experts. Greece would have to withdraw voluntarily.  But if the other countries cut off aid, it may have little choice.         
 
Among European economists outside Germany, the idea that a country  should be put under pressure to leave the euro zone 
is regarded  generally as reckless and cruel. Greek banks would fail, the country  would 
default on its debt and would lack a credible currency with which  to buy essential imported goods like oil or food. The whole euro area,  their thinking goes, would suffer as investors feared the disintegration  of the currency union and perhaps the European Union itself.        
 “It’s very risky,” said Silvio Peruzzo, an economist in London for Royal  Bank of Scotland. “It would set a precedent for other countries leaving  the region. And the market would start to flirt with the idea that the  euro as a whole doesn’t make sense.”        
 But 
in Germany, with its embedded fear of inflation and insistence that  individuals should suffer the consequences of their actions, 
the idea  that Greece should just leave is gaining wider currency, even in elite  circles.        
 Otmar Issing, a former chief economist of the European Central Bank and  one of the architects of the common currency, has implied that Greece  should exit. Asked about his position by e-mail, Mr. Issing answered  indirectly, saying that countries that break the rules of monetary union  — as Greece did — should have to fend for themselves.        
 “If a country does not comply with the conditions agreed on, it should  not get further financial aid,” he said. “A country which does not get  further support has to decide what to do.”        
 
Mr. Issing and Mr. Sinn are both extremely influential, and their  thinking provides an intellectual foundation for opinions widely held by  ordinary Germans. Chancellor Angela Merkel is facing intense pressure  within her own center-right party, some of whose members are pushing for  a special party congress to discuss the 
debt crisis.        
 
Greeks, meanwhile, are as fed up with Germany as Germans are with  Greece. As plumes of tear gas bathed the streets of Athens in June, for  example, many protesters said they wanted the drachma back.        
 “We don’t care about staying in the euro,” said one protester, who gave  his name only as Dimitris. “It would be costly, but at least with the  drachma we would be able to control our own currency and our own  future.”        
 Greeks have still not forgotten a cover on the German magazine Focus  last year, which depicted the Venus de Milo raising a middle finger.  “Cheats in our euro family,” said the headline, a reference clearly  aimed at Greece.        
 “People believe Greeks don’t pay our taxes and we don’t want to work,”  said Christos Manolas, a Greek businessman. “
That’s a myth perpetuated  by the Germans.”        
 Mr. Manolas cited a study published in June by the French bank Natixis,  which found that Greeks and other south Europeans worked more hours than  Germans, though the German economy was more productive.        
 Nor have Greeks let go of the idea that 
Germany owes them billions in  reparations that were never paid after the brutal Nazi occupation during  World War II. “We could pay off half our debts today with those  reparations,” Mr. Manolas said, echoing a sentiment often expressed by  his fellow citizens.        
 Among European economists as a whole, the idea that Greece should  withdraw from the euro is seen as irresponsible, if not verging on  madness. Jean-Claude Trichet, the president of the European Central  Bank, has called such proposals “absurd.”        
 Charles Wyplosz, an economics professor at the Graduate Institute in  Geneva, said the idea that Greece should spin off was “as silly as could  be.”        
 “It would be the undermining of the euro itself,” he said. “
Nobody's will benefit from that.”(Nobody's ne benficia sempre!

)
 The German view is also based on the presumption that the northern  European countries have a more virtuous record than those in the south,  which has not always been true.        
 Early in the last decade, Germany’s budget deficit was in violation of  treaty limits and its economy was one of the weakest in Europe.        
 But Mr. Sinn of the Ifo Institute and other German economists argue that  countries like Greece will never do what they need to do to fix their  economies if others keep bailing them out.        
 They point out that market pressure in the last week has prompted the  Italian government to speed up efforts to remove barriers to  entrepreneurship, after years of procrastination.        
 “We have seen that market pressure via higher interest rates is the most  convincing sanction — if not the only one — which will trigger  substantial, immediate reform measures,” Mr. Issing wrote.        
 Economists who say Greece should leave the euro zone acknowledge that  Greek banks would probably fail and that the Greek economy would suffer a  deep recession.        
 “Individuals would have to accept a big drop in living standards,” said  Matthias Kullas, an economist at the Center for European Policy in  Freiburg, Germany. “But the living standard has to fall anyway.”        
 The benefit would be that Greece would have its own currency and  monetary policy and could devalue to recover competitiveness, he said.  “It would be a very difficult adjustment process, but afterward, Greece  could stand on its own two feet,” he said.        
 
Other countries, like Italy and Portugal, might face pressure to leave  the euro zone, too, Mr. Kullas said. “Some countries would suffer, and  some would not be able to stay.”        
 But the result, he argued, would be a currency union with 
more integrity.        
 “Whoever wants to be a member of the euro zone has to follow the rules,  and undertake the necessary reforms,” Mr. Kullas said. “For me that  would strengthen trust in the euro.”        
	
 Liz Alderman reported from Paris.