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Europe’s Financial Troubles Spread to Belgium, Austria

Posted by hkarner - 26. Januar 2011

Dieser Artikel ist die Quelle von Stratfor’s Annual 2011 Forecast, in dem Österreich als möglicher Bailout Candidate bezeichnet  wird (hfk)

December 14, 2010 | 1451 GMT

Summary

Standard & Poor’s said Dec. 14 that it likely will downgrade Belgium’s credit rating due to the size of the country’s government debt and budget deficit, along with its inability to form a stable government. The announcement indicates that Europe’s financial woes are spreading from the PIIGS — Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain — to more established economies, particularly Belgium and Austria.

Analysis

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Standard & Poor’s warned Dec. 14 that Belgium’s mix of high government debt, a high budget deficit and the chronic inability to form a stable government would likely force the ratings agency to downgrade the country’s credit rating (currently at AA+), possibly within six months. Such an event is not yet inevitable, but the mere announcement of the “negative watch” heralds the spread of Europe’s ongoing financial troubles to Europe’s more established states.

Until now nearly all concern for the financial stability of eurozone states has focused on the PIIGS, an acronym investors created to refer to Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain. These states share certain characteristics that include large — and in many cases, popped — bubbles in real estate and finance, high budget deficit and debt levels, and political difficulty in addressing the problems.

To this list of states in distress, STRATFOR would like to add two more developed Western European countries: Austria and Belgium, both of which share key negative characteristics of the PIIGS.

Belgium is certainly the worse off of the two. It suffers from a residential real estate bubble roughly as bad as Spain’s, roughly half again as bad in relative terms as the U.S. subprime crisis. Belgium’s 2009 headline government debt level clocked in at 96 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), 20 percentage points worse than Portugal — the next PIIGS state that STRATFOR expects will need a bailout. But perhaps most important is that modern Belgium cannot seem to hold a government together. Since the last elections in April 2007 it has had three separate governments, and that does not include the 18 months of interim governments required to hash out coalition deals that were complex and unstable in equal measure. The soon-to-be-mounting obsession among investors is that such political dysfunction will make the austerity required to fix the budget next to impossible.

Austria is better off than Belgium by all of these measures. Its debt and deficit are both considerably lower (68 percent of GDP versus 96 percent of GDP and 3.5 percent of GDP versus 6 percent of GDP, respectively), its political system is more or less in order, and its housing sector — nearly alone within Europe — was never overbuilt. Austria’s biggest outlier is that its banks are listing badly, due to their overexuberance in lending into the now-popped credit bubble that plagues Central Europe.

 

The point that Austria and Belgium have most in common, however, is one they share with the weaker states of the PIIGS grouping: They are largely dependent upon external financing to manage their sovereign debt loads. Austria, Belgium, Greece and Ireland are all relatively small states with limited indigenous financial resources. When a state faces financial duress, the first thing the government does is hash out a deal — often forcefully — with its own financial sector, applying those resources to the problem. Such is standard fare in major states such as Germany and Italy. Smaller states often lack such options, forcing the governments to turn to international investors for cash. In good times this is irrelevant, but when money gets tight and investors get scared, an investor stampede can crush a state’s finances overnight. Such a calamity was precisely what forced the Greek and Irish breakdowns and bailouts. The exposure of all four of these states to such outsiders is more than 50 percent of GDP, which as Greece and Ireland have already demonstrated so vividly, is an amount that simply cannot be coped with in a panic.

Austria and Belgium are advanced, technocratic economies with sophisticated financial sectors. Any financial contagion that breaks into the developed states of Western Europe via these two countries would terrify investors who have been fairly convinced that the euro’s problems were safely sequestered in the somewhat manageable states of the PIIGS grouping. Should Austria or Belgium go the way of Greece, all bets will be off in Europe.

5 Antworten to “Europe’s Financial Troubles Spread to Belgium, Austria”

  1. hkarner said

    Greetings from Austin,

    I’m afraid only so much data can be crammed into our annual brief, but here is the core of the argument.

    We identify countries that may need a bailout on a number of criteria:

    – The potential for economic growth does not justify sovereign debt loads (Greece, Portugal).
    – Domestic political factors are not in place to enforce the austerity measures that could forestall a bailout (Greece, Belgium, Spain).
    – The debt load has become too large compared to GDP for the state to manage payments over the long-term under any realistic scenario (Greece, Ireland).
    – There are exposures elsewhere in the economy that will require the state to step in during a crisis (Ireland, Spain, Austria).
    – A high enough percentage of the government’s debt is held by non-national institutions, so those investors‘ decisions have more impact upon the financing of that debt than anything that occurs in the national capital (Greece, Portugal, Belgium, Austria).

    Austria can take good news and bad news from this.

    Good news: The Austrians have been doing everything right for the past two year; Their budget is more or less in order. Austrian politics are collegial enough to handle austerity if it becomes needed. Austria’s banking sector — while overexposed to Central Europe — is not so
    moribund or large that the state cannot handle an internal bailout. Portugal, Belgium and Spain are obviously in much worse positions.

    Bad news: Some four-fifths of Austria’s outstanding debt — roughly 50% of GDP — is held by non-Austrians. If there is an investor scare (as there was with Ireland), there is very little that the Austrian government can do to shore up investor confidence. Under those circumstances Austria could well require a eurozone bailout, and not because of a single thing that Austria had (or hadn’t) done.

    From our point of view the biggest danger for Austria would be if/when Belgium requires a bailout. At that point investors are very likely to take a much deeper second look at all ‚developed‘ European economies, and at that point Austria would likely find itself under some extremely
    uncomfortable scrutiny. Particularly if such scrutiny occurs at points where large amounts of existing debt mature (specifically in July and October of 2012, when bonds worth 3.5 percent and 4.3 percent of GDP will need to be refinanced).

    I think you’ll find most of the information you’re interested in contained in the following article:
    http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20101214-europes-financial-troubles-spread-belgium-austria

    Cheers from Stratfor,

    Peter Zeihan

    >
    > On 1/25/2011 12:26 PM, helmut.karner@tplus.at wrote:
    >> Prof. Helmut F. Karner sent a message using the contact form at
    >> https://www.stratfor.com/contact.
    >>
    >> Question to Peter Zeihan :
    >> „How do you come to such a (courageous) statement – and that without >> any proof or argumentation?
    >> Although I somehow symphatize with your position (and that as head of
    >> an Austrian think tank ) – there are further candidates ahead of us –
    >> and the write off of CEE credits will not yet happen this year.
    >> Therefore: in the mnedium term you might be right, but for the short
    >> term (2011) I believe it is unrealistic.
    >> Best regards,
    >> Helmut F. Karner
    >>

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