What Happened in Cyprus?
62 Pages Posted: 18 May 2014 Last revised: 6 Jun 2014
Date Written: May 15, 2014
Abstract
This is a case study of how a country nearly reached bankruptcy in March 2013, within five years from entering the Eurozone. The magnitude of the requested assistance is extremely large relative to GDP (100%) and studying this event provides useful lessons for avoiding such crises in the future. The crisis resulted from a worsening European economic environment (especially in Greece), bad choices with regards to public finances, weak corporate governance within the local banking sector, inadequate and/or difficult regulation of cross-border banking, worsening competitiveness, and bad political decisions at the European and, especially, the local (Cypriot) level. Local politics, reflected in short term political calculations and/or inadequate understanding of the magnitude of the crisis, delayed corrective action for 18 months until election time, making a bad situation almost impossible to deal with. Overconfidence can be one behavioural explanation for why local politicians ignored the dramatic costs of inaction.
Keywords: Cyprus, Bail-in, stress tests, cost of inaction, sovereign debt, banking crisis, fiscal imbalances, European sovereign debt crisis
JEL Classification: E00, E62, G00, H63
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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