What will Germany pay for not compromising with Greece?

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euro coinImage source, Getty Images

You could argue that the very public nature of the disagreement between Germany and Greece, over the terms of the latest attempt by Greece to avoid financial collapse, is good for the reputation of the eurozone.

In that at least colossal sums of taxpayer's money aren't being committed via murky deals in the kind of hidden-away government rooms that used to be smoke-filled.

That said, confidence that the euro will endure till the end of days is hardly instilled by the conspicuous lack of trust between Germany and Greece.

The point is that Greece swallowed its pride and finally gave up its insistence that it must have a new bridging loan, only to be immediately accused by the German finance ministry of dishonesty - of merely pretending to adhere to bail out terms in requesting an extension of the existing €172bn rescue package (which is due to expire).

So much for famous European communautaire spirit.

There is a paradox in Germany's financial Puritanism: this theological commitment that all debts must be repaid on the originally specified terms could be much more expensive for it than cutting Greece some slack.

If Greece were to leave the euro, Germany's losses would be greater than any other country's, as Greece's biggest indirect creditor via bailout loans and European Central Bank support.

And there would be a second big cost. If Greece goes, the eurozone would need to demonstrate greater financial solidarity between rich Northern European economies and overstretched southern ones.

That would be necessary to persuade investors and businesses not to withdraw vital funds from those economies thought most likely to follow Greece out of the eurozone.

And of course as the biggest eurozone economy by far it would be Germany which would be expected to make the biggest contribution to any expanded bailout fund and to increasing the firepower of the European Central Bank.