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Greeks use credit cards to spend savings amid capital controls

THEY’RE facing financial meltdown, but Greeks are splashing out on electronics and jewellery like never before. Why?

Why are Greeks spending crazily?
Why are Greeks spending crazily?

USE it or lose it — that’s the plan for many Greeks, who have been going on a credit card-fuelled spending spree out of fear their savings could be confiscated or devalued.

Wary of the experience in fellow eurozone member Cyprus two years ago, when deposits were seized to recapitalise banks, Greeks are opting to drain their accounts by electronically paying taxes and bills — or buying luxury goods.

“Up to last weekend, people bought a lot of things to protect their money,” confirmed Andreas Triantaphylidis, vice president of the Association of Athens Merchants.

Between June 27, when Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras announced a referendum that made his eurozone creditors boil, and July 10, when speculation peaked that Greece could crash out of the euro, luxury products have been flying off the shelves.

Sales of expensive goods such as watches and jewellery and electronic items like smartphones and computers leapt 30 per cent compared to the same period last year, Triantaphylidis said.

The unexpected wave of spending was sparked by the rationing of cash from ATMs — withdrawals have been limited to 60 euros per day for over two weeks — spurring the much wider use of credit cards and electronic cash transfers than ever before in Greece.

Greeks have been subject to capital controls for two weeks now. Picture: Andreas Solaro / AFP
Greeks have been subject to capital controls for two weeks now. Picture: Andreas Solaro / AFP

Some 500,000 credit cards were delivered in the past few days, helping push card transactions up 130 per cent, according to the Association of Greek Banks.

“Last week, we had a lot of clients. They wanted to buy all they could, for fear of losing half of their savings,” said Stephanie, a saleswoman in a family-owned jewellery store in the capital’s up-market Kolonaki neighbourhood.

Jewellery made of gold, a traditional safe-haven metal, and luxury watches, some of which cost up to 6,000 euros, were snatched up by “not especially rich” customers aged 30 to 50, the 28-year-old employee said.

“Greeks: I don’t understand them. Me, I’d never spend my money in these times,” Stephanie added.

Since Athens struck a deal with its eurozone partners on Monday, easing fears of a “Grexit” or a “bail-in”, where bank deposits are seized, the Greek customers have been replaced by the usual tourist clientele.

And the rush of “protective spending”, covering high-margin expense items, hasn’t turned around Greece’s economic fortunes. According to the National Confederation of Greek Business, retail sales fell 70 per cent between June 27 and July 10, compared to the same period a year earlier.

Only purchases of fuel and food increased, seen as proof the country is well and truly in crisis.

Anti-austerity protesters marched in front of the Greek parliament on Wednesday. Picture: Emilio Morenatti.
Anti-austerity protesters marched in front of the Greek parliament on Wednesday. Picture: Emilio Morenatti.

The government on Tuesday went out of its way to quash speculation and rumours that fuelled public panic, saying the bailout agreement “guaranteed deposits” and averted any need for a bail-in.

It added that parliament had until next week to transpose an EU directive into law, adopted after Cyprus’s 2013 crisis, that guaranteed deposits up to 100,000 euros.

There has been another side-effect of Greeks’ fears about their savings — people are paying their taxes.

Some one billion euros flowed into state coffers between June 27 and July 10 as citizens looked to settle what they owed before any deposit “haircut” — nearly as much as the tax system usually receives in a month.

The payments, made despite the decision by tax authorities to push back the deadline for income tax payments to the end of July, ironically come after Athens pledged to crack down on Greece’s rampant tax evasion under its new reform plan.

“For the first time in my life, I’m on time with my taxes,” said Giorgos, a 35-year-old running a small family-owned publishing firm.

“I owe nothing to the government.”

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/finance/economy/world-economy/greeks-use-credit-cards-to-spend-savings-amid-capital-controls/news-story/076303ffd2fcb9cf71a589faa023ff08