Tuesday, August 2, 2011

The Silent Bank Run in Greece

The Guardian reports:
In one of the biggest banks in the centre of Athens a clerk is explaining how his savers have been thronging to pull out their cash. 
Wary of giving his name, he glances around the marble-floored, wood-panelled foyer before pulling out a slim A4-sized folder. It is about the size of a small safety-deposit box – and those, ever since the financial crisis hit Greece 18 months ago, have become the most sought-after financial products in the country. Worried about whether the banks will stay in business, Greeks have been taking their life savings out of accounts and sticking them in metal slits in basement vaults.

The boxes are so popular that the bank has doubled the rent on them in the past year – and still every day between five and 10 customers request one. This bank ran out of spares months ago. The clerk leans over: "I've been working in a bank for 31 years, and I've never seen a panic like this."

Official figures back him up. In May alone, almost €5bn (£4.4bn) was pulled out of Greek deposits, as part of what analysts describe as a "silent bank run".
And here's what is happening to the country:
Greece is already one of the poorest and most unequal societies in Europe, reckons Christos Papatheodorou at the Democritus University of Thrace. Among the few countries that look worse are Romania, Bulgaria and Latvia. So what will Greek society look like after the government's austerity measures take effect? He pauses, then says: "It will probably look like a developing country."
Other parts of the EuroZone are not behind as far as disintegration. And the U.S. has a little more time, but if things don't change soon, the U.S. will look like Greece, maybe worse---once the price inflation really starts to accelerate.

2 comments:

  1. Poor and unequal, you say? Why, this must mean that Greece is a thriving capitalist paradise!

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  2. lol it's Europe's ghetto country.

    ReplyDelete