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By Dr. Jim Leontiades
It is understandable that Cypriots are still looking for someone to blame for the pain and disruption of the financial crisis. And who more likely than the banks? They were at the centre of the crisis. The country’s two largest banks, Laiki and the Bank of Cyprus, were the ones whose deposits received the devastating haircuts. It is little wonder that many have come to believe that the problems of the banks which ruined so many lives was due to their behaviour. But was it? Tracing the guilt for the financial crisis might well begin with the events surrounding the two major Cypriot banks, the Bank of Cyprus (BOC) and Laiki.
Dilemma and Solution
The Eurogroup meeting of March 2013 found the country’s second largest bank, Laiki, in serious financial difficulty. Even though the
The solution arrived at was almost elegant in its simplicity. The Central Bank of
Questions of guilt and legality
These events are past history but the impact of the following decisions and questions as to their ethics and legality are still with us:
* Why did the Central Bank of
* Guilt should also be considered in relation to the ECB which continued to supply loans to Laiki long after it was obvious that the huge amount of ELA it was supplying to a failing bank was irresponsible. The ECB has consistently claimed that the responsibility was entirely that of the Central Bank of
* What law or logic determined that the ELA debt of government-owned Laiki should be imposed exclusively on BOC? BOC management was not consulted on the merger with Laiki, which it considered unfair. The board of directors resigned in protest.
* The haircut imposed on BOC caused great damage to BOC depositors (including hospitals, charities, provident funds, small businesses) as well as to the bank itself. Why was the BOC haircut not shared with other viable banks? The initial proposal of the Eurogroup would have done just that, imposed a haircut on all depositors. This solution, rejected by parliament, would have resulted in a much less traumatic and fairer burden on what was after all a national problem.
* Why were the Cypriot banks allowed so little time by the Eurogroup to sell their Greek branches? The Cypriot banks had to sell their Greek properties under extreme time pressure at “fire sale prices” to protect
In its efforts to get to the bottom of the crisis, the government appointed an independent investigative commission comprised of distinguished jurists. These donated their time as a service to their country, refusing any form of payment (even buying their own coffee). The commission’s report places primary responsibility for the crisis on politicians, President Christofias and his political supporters. The government that had ordered the investigation ignored the advice of its own commission and turned the matter over to the Attorney General’s office which proceeded to focus mainly on the banks. After some four years of investigation and several court trials costing millions, a senior BOC manager was convicted of market manipulation, but no manager or director of that bank has been found guilty for the