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Greek protesters are better economists than the European authoritiesEuropean authorities are putting the Greek people through years of unnecessary suffering and privatising the country's public assets at firesale prices rather than facing up to the default and debt restructuring that will have to take place sometime. Mark Weisbrot IMAGINE
that in the worst year of our recent recession, the It
would probably be similar to what we are seeing in Unaccountable What
makes the Greek public even angrier is that their collective punishment
is being meted out by foreign powers - the European Commission, European
Central Bank (ECB), and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). This
highlights perhaps the biggest problem of unaccountable, right-wing,
supra-national institutions. And if that required a renegotiation of the public debt, that is what the country would do. This is going to happen even under the European authorities, but first they are putting the country through years of unnecessary suffering, and taking advantage of the situation to privatise public assets at firesale prices and restructure the Greek state and economy so that it is more to their liking. I have maintained for some time that the Greek government has had more bargaining power than it has used, and the recent events seem to confirm this. Because of the massive opposition to further economic self-destruction - the latest polls show that 80% of Greeks are opposed to making any more concessions to the European authorities - the Greek government has so far been unable to reach an agreement with the IMF for the release of their latest loan tranche on 29 June. So what happened? The IMF is going to hand over the money anyway, while the European authorities (who are in control of IMF decision-making on matters of Greek economic policy) continue to quarrel over how long they will postpone Greece's inevitable debt restructuring, roll-over, or whatever they choose to call it. That's
because the prospect of a disorderly default - as would be triggered
by the IMF simply sticking to its programme and not lending Harder line A
democratically accountable Greek government would take a much harder
line with the European authorities. For example, they could start with
a moratorium on interest payments, which are currently running at 6.6%
of GDP. (This is a huge interest rate burden, and the IMF projects it
to increase to 8.6% by 2014. For comparison, despite all the noise about
the The
IMF's latest review of its agreement with The
European authorities have more than enough money to finance a recovery
programme in Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy.This article first appeared on the website of the Guardian (www.guardian.co.uk). *Third World Resurgence No. 250, June 2011, pp 9-10 |
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