AFP, Nicosia: The unprecedented decision to tap all bank
accounts in Cyprus as part of an EU bailout is a threat to the entire economy
of the Mediterranean island, an important financial centre, analysts say.
“The damage will be long-lasting,” said Fiona Mullen, an
economic analyst specialising in Cyprus.
“Business and financial services were the only sectors
generating jobs and tax revenue and they have just had a double whammy with
both the increase in corporate tax and the hit on deposits,” she told AFP.
Early on Saturday, the government agreed to the levy on
bank deposits in return for a desperately needed 10-billion-euro ($13 billion)
bailout that will also see an increase in corporate tax from 10 percent to 12.5
percent.
Savers reacted with shock and anger at the bank deposit
levy of up to 9.9 percent—the first eurozone bailout in which private
depositors are having to help foot the bill.
At the same time, an additional “withholding tax” will be
imposed on interest on bank deposits.
According to Marios Skandalis, vice president of the
Cyprus Institute of Certified Public Accountants, “There is a very high risk
that this could be the end of Cyprus as a strong and reliable financial centre.
“Both measures target a major sector of the Cypriot
economy and will in the end have a negative impact on GDP,” he said.
“The whole banking system is based on trust. If the trust
is lost, the whole system is going to collapse.”
The announcement early on Saturday ahead of a long
holiday weekend in Cyprus sparked a brief run on banks, with depositors
withdrawing cash from ATM machines in a desperate bid to reduce the amount they
will have to pay on their deposits.
For German political analyst Hubert Faustmann, tapping
the bank accounts of ordinary depositors is “an experiment.”
“Economic analysts don’t know how investors will react,”
the Nicosia-based analyst told AFP. “The fallout is unpredictable,” with no-one
knowing what will happen on Tuesday when the banks reopen after the long
weekend.
“People who benefit from the status of the island as a
tax haven and potential money launderers will pay their share, and that should
satisfy German public opinion—but these measures also hit everybody else, and
they can potentially kill the island,” Faustmann said.
Economist George Theocharides told private Cypriot
channel Sigma TV that the levy on bank deposits could raise a potential 20
billion euros.
“It seems all deposits are affected and each account at
each bank will be cut. The consequences are not just bad for Cyprus but negative
for other eurozone countries and financial sectors,” he said.
According to Faustmann, “They opened a Pandora’s box. The
question is: can it happen elsewhere?” he asked of a levy on deposits.
“They set a precedent which might have a domino effect:
what if investors in all bailed out EU countries decide to withdraw money?”
The Cyprus parliament, originally due to meet later on
Sunday to discuss emergency legislation pushing through the painful EU bailout,
will now meet on Monday at 1400 GMT instead, state broadcaster CyBC reported.
As the scale of opposition to the measures became clear,
President Nicos Anastasiades also postponed a planned address to the nation, it
added.
CyBC said there was a possibility that Tuesday may now
also be declared a bank holiday as the legislative process falters.
However, Faustmann believes that despite the opposition
of the communist AKEL party, which has 19 of the 56 seats in parliament, the
measure will have to pass—albeit experiencing a tough ride first.
“Parliament will have
to vote it through because the alternative is bankruptcy. They cannot amend it,
as far as I know, it is a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ vote—and a ‘no’ means bankruptcy,” he
said.