by Wolfgang Münchau
Financial Times
May 8, 2011
They cannot even organise a private meeting. How, then, can they solve a debt crisis? The bungling of a not-so-secret gathering of finance ministers in Luxembourg on Friday night provides an object lesson in how the politics of eurozone crisis resolution is going wrong.
We learnt this from a leak to Spiegel Online. The German news site’s story said Greece was considering leaving the eurozone, and that finance ministers were holding a secret meeting to discuss the issue. The story also offered the intriguing detail that Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister, had a report in his briefcase warning him of the prohibitive costs of a Greek exit.
Earlier that Friday evening, the spokesman for Jean-Claude Juncker, the prime minister of Luxembourg who also has responsibility for finance, flatly denied that the meeting was taking place at all. That statement was obviously untrue. The meeting ended on Friday night with the announcement that there was no discussion on a Greek exit or a Greek restructuring. I very much doubt that this statement – or indeed any official statement on the eurozone crisis – was true either.
It is my understanding that this meeting, and numerous others preceding it, discussed the whole gamut of options, including, of course, a restructuring of Greek debt. But the fact that options are being discussed does not mean they are being pursued. I am fairly sure that Greece is not preparing to leave the eurozone, and that the European Union rejects an involuntary debt restructuring – for now that is.
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