This painting by Gericault, one of the most famous of the French  Romantic  School 
It is too soon to compare the current travails of the eurozone with those of the sailors of La Méduse, but surely it isn’t to say that a euro shipwreck looks increasingly possible.
The latest report by the IMF on Greece 
While large institutional bank creditors had “voluntarily” agreed to a “haircut” of 50% on their Greek public bonds, rumor has it that the government wants to apply it only to the nominal value of the debt; by offering very low interest rates and extending maturities it would increase the effective “haircut” to 75%.
Furthermore, can Greece Greece 
Initially, I thought that the insistence by several European heads of state that the exchange be voluntary was nothing more than pride.  Now, I wonder.  What if big European banks had been sellers of CDS (credit default swaps)[1]?  Why not?  After all, the underlying credit risk was supposed to be zero; what a better business than selling for thousands of euros protection (CDS) against a risk that was non-existent (sovereign default)?  
European banks may have sold relatively few Greek CDS, but they may have sold tons of French, Italian and Spanish CDS, and a formal default in Greece would, at the very least, force these banks to provision against the other countries’ CDS because the myth of zero-risk eurozone would disappear.  Provisioning is a euphemism for taking a (big) loss.  I did look into the exposure of BNP and other banks to European sovereign debt but these banks only disclosure their exposure in their banking books, not in their trading books, which is very unfortunate under the circumstances.
The only way for Greece Greece Greece Greece 
The other eurozone members face different but equally daunting problems.  One is the fragility of their banking system.  In the US Europe , the proportions are reversed yet banks have less capital and less stable funding (their ratio of loans/deposits being well over 1.0).  In recent weeks, big European banks have announced extensive divestiture programs to strengthen their balance sheets.  This may be good at the micro level, but it is bad at the macro, leading straight to recession.  And then there is the CDS question raised above.
European governments could have forced their hands with their equivalent of a TARP program (by far the most successful US 
The other problem is existential.  Member countries share a goal but not the means to reach it.  They want to be a powerful economic bloc but they do not want to pay the price for it but harmonizing their fiscal and social policies, and in the process relinquishing some degree of sovereignty.  They desire a common currency but refuse to let the ECB back member states private banks not to mention member state public debts.  Finally, member state populations, when asked, reject the idea of a Brussels  command, yet they now have to accept one from Berlin  and, yes, Brussels 
As the situation worsens and tensions rise, the survivors are warily eyeing each other; numerous meetings have shown that they are unable to reach big decisions (such as recapitalizing their banks, getting the ECB to step up to the plate) or to display real solidarity.  The sniping has started (witness the French/UK[2] war of words on credit ratings) and will get worse.  
For all of the demonstrations of coordination and harmony, it is clear that Germany  is the leader of the eurozone and France Brussels ; today, it has been relinquished in part to Berlin 
Afterwards, changes are inevitable.  Pulling up to Germany France  can’t revert to the age-old French/English/Prussian triangulation because the UK Italy , under strong leadership, could offer France Italy  would not offer a real triangulation, and as a result, I think that France UK 
Perhaps a slowly healing US and resilient BRICs will give Europe  six months to a year to avoid disaster.  But the pressure will not abate, the price to pay will not drop.  In the end, a Europe of Nations is more representative of the continent’s two millennia of history than a contrived eurozone.

 
 
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