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There was stupefied silence in the room, followed by the sounds of suppressed amusement. Greece?
But the thought that a small European economy, with one-third of one per cent of the world's GDP, should worry this paper's readers is no longer outlandish.
Nervous markets and news reports this past week have talked of the Greek crisis sparking another Lehman moment, a la 2008.
The world economy may not be teetering on the edge, as yet, since all of Europe has agreed that Greece should not be allowed to slip into a messy default that could have unpredictable repercussions.
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No one knows whether the Greek parliament will vote in the next few days in favour of a fresh austerity plan - required if Greece is to get a second bailout package.
If what is considered economically unavoidable becomes politically impossible, as seems to be the case, something is going to give.
If you want to bet on eventual outcomes, consider what the Greeks are going through: GDP is shrinking for the third year in a row, household consumption in the latest quarter is down by 7.8 per cent, and investment by 19.2 per cent.
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In such a situation, an austerity-cum-fresh taxation package that raises taxes, cuts the salaries and pensions of government employees, and reduces government spending, is guaranteed to cause riots - and adds to problems instead of solving them.
But then, there is no alternative available, except the unthinkable one: that Greece (and other afflicted Southern European countries) should get out of the Eurozone.
Way back in 1996, American economist Rudiger Dornbusch had forecast the present crisis while damning the project for a common European currency.
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Another American economist, Martin Feldstein, wrote on similar lines last month (in a column syndicated in Business Standard, arguing that Greece should take temporary leave of the Eurozone.
No one in Greece is arguing this coldly rational viewpoint, as yet. The problem is that Europe and the International Monetary Fund cannot seem to agree on anything.
And that is what has markets and analysts fearing another financial quake.
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This is a useful reminder to us in India that macro-economic mismanagement can have catastrophic consequences. To be sure, the Indian economy's health readings are a world removed from what Greece has, but that does not mean no hard decisions are needed.
Public debt (in relation to GDP) is about three times the average for emerging market economies.
Bringing it down will mean ignoring the calls for massive new spending in areas favoured by civil society activists, cutting subsidies (read higher prices for everything from cooking gas to public transport), and introducing new taxes (perhaps along the lines Chidambaram has suggested).
Imagine how Anna Hazare, Prakash Karat, Medha Patkar and Nitin Gadkari will react to all that, and you get some answers about an edgy government's room for manoeuvre.