Katastrofescenarier

Hans Rustad

Den bri­tiske regje­ring anser det for sann­syn­lig at euroen bry­ter sam­men i over­skue­lig frem­tid, og ber ambas­sa­der for­be­rede seg på alle eventualiteter.

As the Ita­lian govern­ment strugg­led to bor­row and Spain con­side­red seeking an inter­na­tio­nal bail-out, Bri­tish minis­ters pri­vat­ely warned that the break-up of the euro, once almost unt­hin­kable, is now increas­ingly plausible.

Diplo­mats are prepa­ring to help Bri­tons abroad through a ban­king col­lapse and even riots ari­sing from the debt cri­sis.
The Trea­sury con­fir­med ear­lier this month that con­tin­gency plan­ning for a col­lapse is now under way.

A senior minis­ter has now revealed the extent of the Government’s con­cern, say­ing that Bri­tain is now plan­ning on the basis that a euro col­lapse is now just a mat­ter of time.

It’s in our inte­rests that they keep play­ing for time because that gives us more time to pre­pare,” the minis­ter told the Daily Telegraph.

Ban­ker og store fir­maer lager til­sva­rende scenarier.

Ita­lia skal låne 30 mil­li­ar­der euro i januar. Hvis det ikke greier det, er Ita­lia kon­kurs. Da vil euro­pe­iske ban­ker gå over ende, og fir­maer vil ikke len­ger få kreditt.

Det snak­kes om at brutto nasjo­nal­pro­dukt kan falle til det halve. Alvor­lig sosial uro kan ikke utelukkes.

De per­spek­ti­ver som trek­kes opp er slik man ser på film, når den sosiale orden går i oppløsning.

Recent For­eign and Com­mon­wealth Office instruc­tions to embas­sies and con­su­la­tes request con­tin­gencyp­lan­ning for extreme sce­na­rios inclu­ding rio­ting and social unrest.
Gre­ece has seen seve­ral out­bre­aks of civil dis­or­der as its govern­ment strugg­les with its huge debts. Bri­tish offi­ci­als think simi­lar sce­nes can­not be ruled out in other nations if the euro col­lap­ses.
Diplo­mats have also been told to pre­pare to help tens of thou­sands of Bri­tish citizens in euro­zone countries with the con­se­quen­ces of a finan­cial col­lapse that would leave them unable to access bank accounts or even wit­hdraw cash.
Fuel­ling the fears of finan­cial mar­kets for the euro, reports in Mad­rid yester­day sug­ge­sted that the new Popu­lar Party govern­ment could seek a bail-out from eit­her the Euro­pean Union res­cue fund or the Inter­na­tio­nal Mone­tary Fund.
There are also growing fears for Italy, whose new govern­ment was for­ced to pay record inte­rest rates on new bonds issued yester­day.
The yield on new six-month loans was 6.5 per cent, nearly double last month’s rate. And the yield on out­stan­ding two-year loans was 7.8 per cent, well above the level con­side­red unsustai­nable.
Italy’s new govern­ment will have to sell more than EURO 30 bil­lion of new bonds by the end of January to refi­nance its debts. Ana­lysts say there is no gua­rantee that inves­tors will buy all of those bonds, which could force Italy to default.
The Ita­lian govern­ment yester­day said that in talks with Ger­man Chan­cel­lor Angela Mer­kel and French Pre­si­dent Nico­las Sar­kozy, Prime Minis­ter Mario Monti had agreed that an Ita­lian col­lapse “would ine­vi­tably be the end of the euro.”
The EU trea­ties that created the euro and set its mem­ber­ship rules con­tain no pro­vi­sion for mem­bers to leave, meaning any break-up would be dis­or­derly and potenti­ally chao­tic.
If euro­zone govern­ments defaulted on their debts, the Euro­pean banks that hold many of their bonds would risk col­lapse.
Some ana­lysts say the shock waves of such an event would risk the col­lapse of the entire finan­cial sys­tem, lea­ving banks unable to return money to retail depo­si­tors and destroy­ing com­pa­nies depen­dent on bank cre­dit.
The Finan­cial Ser­vices Aut­hority this week issued a pub­lic war­ning to Bri­tish banks to bol­ster their con­tin­gency plans for the break-up of the single cur­rency.
Some eco­nomists believe that at worst, the out­right col­lapse of the euro could reduce GDP in its member-states by up to half and trig­ger mass unemp­loy­ment.
Ana­lysts at UBS, an invest­ment bank ear­lier this year warned that the most extreme con­se­quen­ces of a break-up include risks to basic pro­perty rights and the threat of civil dis­or­der.
“When the unemp­loy­ment con­se­quen­ces are facto­red in, it is vir­tually impos­sible to con­si­der a break-up sce­na­rio wit­hout some serious social con­se­quen­ces,” UBS said.

Pre­pare for riots in euro col­lapse, For­eign Office warns
Bri­tish embas­sies in the euro­zone have been told to draw up plans to help Bri­tish expats through the col­lapse of the single cur­rency, amid new fears for Italy and Spain

Leserkommentarer på Document er gjenstand for moderering, som ikke skjer kontinuerlig og under enhver omstendighet ikke om natten. Vi ønsker en respektfull tone uten personangrep, sleivete språk eller flammende retorikk. Vis særlig nøkternhet når temaet er følsomt. Begrenset redigering av skjemmende detaljer kan finne sted. Skriv til debatt@document.no dersom du ikke forstår hvorfor en kommentar uteblir. Se her for nybegynnerhjelp.