
Markets get a 'spailout'? It's no bailout for spain
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Picasso once described art as “a lie that makes us realize truth.” The same might be said about the art of European policy-making at the moment. Spain GlowImages | Getty Images European
officials shouldn’t be surprised if their latest unveiling—a rescue plan for Spain’s troubled banks—fails yet again to impress markets or resolve the continent’s crisis. After all, whatever
the package of up to might do to calm fears about Spain’s banks for the time being, it may only increase concerns about the health of the sovereign itself. Because the panoply of European
and supranational institutions like the INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND can't lend to banks directly, they will effectively be lending money to Spain to inject into its banks instead.
Indeed, Dow Jones, citing a European official, reports that Spain’s bailout fund (the Fondo de Reestructuracion Ordenada Bancaria, or FROB) will borrow funds from the euro zone’s temporary
Emergency Financial Stability Facility, or EFSF , at least until the permanent European Stability Mechanism fund is up and running. What all the fancy-sounding acronyms in the world can’t
obscure is the fact that Spain will effectively be on the hook itself for whatever sum is borrowed to bail out its banks. As Morgan Stanley economist Joachim Fels put it in a client note
Sunday, “a loan by the EFSF or ESM to the Spanish bank restructuring fund, FROB, hardly counts as a circuit breaker as it raises the Spanish government’s contingent liabilities.” And €100
billion is no chump change. It amounts to nearly 10 percent of Spain’s gross domestic product; the country last year was already running a deficit of about 9 percent of GDP. It isn’t clear
how much of this sum will be borrowed up front, but it is clear that increasing Spain’s debt load at a time when its recession is still deepening is hardly a way to shore up investor
confidence in the nation or the broader euro zone. In fact, such a transfer of private-sector debts to the public sector (which then triggers further austerity measures) has perhaps been one
of the biggest missteps of the crisis; it hardly seems prudent now to double-down. A Pyrrhic victory it will certainly be if Spain’s banks get help at the cost of further eroding the
solvency of the sovereign or the sustainability of the euro zone. Only true political and fiscal union—putting the full bloc’s pocketbook behind struggling nations like Spain— is likely to
shore up investor confidence. If it appears that the bailout for Spain’s banks is but one small step in that larger direction, then investors might give Madrid’s latest maneuver the benefit
of the doubt. If not, Europe’s crisis remains unfinished.