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Greece and EU Attempt to Avoid Disastrous DefaultPosted on Jun 29, 2011ATHENS—Athens in recent days has experienced continuing popular protest, sporadically violent, against the economic austerity program demanded of Greece by the IMF. This reaction has been more severe than most of those seen elsewhere since Wall Street’s “subprime” mortgage scandal, or collaborative swindle as we might indelicately call it, which provoked global economic crisis, its prime (or “subprime,” let us say) victims being the ordinary citizens of recklessly indebted national economies, such as those of Greece and the United States. Among worldly Greeks, most recognize that Greece itself invited what the ordinary Greek citizen interprets as victimization—in particular, victimization by the German government and banks, implacable critics of Greek profligacy and until now opponents of any “bailout” for Greece. The Greeks will tell you that the Germans have never paid war reparations for what they did to Greece, and they also accuse the Germans of having stolen Greece’s national gold reserve during the war. Ordinary Greeks are nonetheless aware of their country’s national fiscal insouciance during the good years of the past decade—when Greece won the UEFA European Football (soccer) Championship in 2004, brilliantly staged the summer Olympic Games also in 2004 and enjoyed unprecedented individual prosperity. The Harvard-educated Andreas Papandraeou (father of the present Greek prime minister George Papandraeou) spent years in political exile in the United States, ending as head of the economics department at the University of California at Berkeley (of all things, in view of what has followed!). He returned to his homeland after the collapse of the Greek military dictatorship of 1967-1974, becoming prime minister in 1981. As one Greek remarked at a recent meeting here of economic and political observers, “Andreas brought back from exile an American-style populism to a Greek population lacking the economic prudence instilled in most American families by their native Protestantism.” The conservative New Democracy governments that followed the departure of Andreas and held power from 1985 to 2009 contributed to national irresponsibility. When they left office, Greece had a deficit of 12.7 percent of GDP, four times the euro-zone limit. The country had entered the European Union on false pretenses, tolerated by an EU leadership that believed “Europe” could not be fully European without Greece’s membership. Advertisement As foreign minister he put an end to the ancient hostility between Greece and Turkey, sending Greek firefighters to help the Turks in a national emergency. He was elected Greece’s prime minister in 2009, just in time for the world crisis—for which the electorate is now holding him responsible. However, he recently won his second vote of confidence for his austerity program (155 to 138) within days, despite a 48-hour general strike and massed protesters outside the parliament. Germany’s Angela Merkel called this “really good news,” although the immediate financial community comment was confused, with a negative bias (as usual). Greece—a minuscule nation of only 11 million people—has recently been the most convenient press and popular scapegoat for the euro-zone crisis. The result of France’s effort last weekend to rescue Greece and the euro zone still has unclear results. Nicholas Sarkozy’s weekend announcement of an innovative rescue plan was a typical French effort to support Europe while fashionable opinion forecasts default for Greece (and possibly the whole euro zone). The French Treasury, the Bank of France and a national bank confederation (the largest European holders of Greek debt) propose to “roll over” half the Greek debt for 30 years, allowing debt-holders to take an immediate reimbursement of 30 percent, with 20 percent invested in a “guarantee fund” of 30-year zero-coupon bonds with triple-A ratings presumably underwritten by the IMF, European Central Bank or the EU itself. The great advantage of this to banks is that it would allow them to remove Greek debt from their balance sheets, lodging the debt in an ad hoc vehicle known on the markets as an SPV. The guarantee fund and the SPV are designed to attract participation by other European and foreign banks. The plan in part resembles the “Brady Bonds” solution to Latin American debt in the 1980s, which allowed creditors to exchange defaulted bank loans for secure instruments, usually backed by U.S. Treasury bonds. The French invented “Europe” with the coal and steel community treaty in 1951. They have since driven it forward with such European projects as the European high-speed train network, Concorde, the Airbus industrial alliance (Boeing’s deadly enemy), the European space agency and its Guiana Space Centre, which dominates commercial space launches, and the Franco-British European military link now being tested in Libya. President Sarkozy’s debt relief plan has won qualified interest thus far, including from the most important European financial paper, The Financial Times, but people at the fatally influential rating agencies are talking about it as a disguised Greek default. George Papandraeou’s parliamentary victory on Wednesday, with Merkel’s endorsement, may prove crucial in what will follow. Visit William Pfaff’s website for more on his latest book, “The Irony of Manifest Destiny: The Tragedy of America’s Foreign Policy,” at www.williampfaff.com. © 2011 Tribune Media Services Inc. New and Improved CommentsWe are launching a major overhaul of our comments section. In addition to more robust spam filtering and moderation, new features include the ability to rate other comments, sort how they are displayed and respond directly via e-mail or in a thread. Unfortunately, commenters will lose their existing Truthdig identities. It's a pain, we know, but on the plus side you will now be able to log in with a plethora of options, including Google, Twitter, Facebook and Disqus accounts. Before launching this system we spent months in discussion with our top commenters. We listened to the feedback and we hope you like what we've come up with. Please direct any problems or concerns to us via our contact page. |
By tropicgirl, July 3, 2011 at 3:19 am Link to this comment
Clearly and consistently now, for month, it has become apparent to all who are interested that the Greek people do not owe this debt.
Furthermore, it is now becoming the prevailing opinion that this was nothing more than a bank fraud, similar to the one committed in numerous places around the world, and more recently, our own country, with the aid of both the Democratic and Republican lawmakers.
Yet we continue to read superficial, snarky stories like this…. you know, the Germans say this…. snicker snicker, and well, the French feel this way.
Who cares who these people really are? They are criminals recognized both inside and outside their own countries…
When will “reporters” turn back to the real news and stop this incessant waste of time?
This is the same story we have heard for the last 6 months. Of Course “Europe is poised”, “Europe has approved”... “Europe has cleared the way..” “Europe is ready…”
The Greek people don’t want the money.
They don’t want any deal with these crooks.
The bankers are the only ones that are defaulting and it is entirely a hoax with regard to the people’s involvement. Not a shred of truth in it.
Report thisBy Nancy, July 1, 2011 at 11:21 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
This is nothing new for the IMF, which has hamstrung developing countries in this way for decades. What’s new is that it’s Greece, and its citizens are among the world’s “middle class” rather than its poorest. This is a good illustration of how the IMF has always operated—selling nations’ land, resources, and people to protect the banks and the profits of the global elite. We’ll see who’s on the chopping block next…
Report thisBy Lafayette, June 30, 2011 at 6:19 am Link to this comment
BAD BANKS
The Japanese and the Swedes made the same manipulation to surmount their crises. It is called creating a “Bad Bank for Bad Debt”. So, now we call it, abracadabra, an SPV. BFD ...
The manipulation gets the Bad Debt off bank-books so they can get back to lending. That is, diminish the collateral they must sequester to off-set Bad Debt.
Unfortunately lending is not really the problem, I submit. The challenge of economic recovery both here and in the EU is the lack of Demand. Consumers are not consuming.
In fact, in the US, they were paying back their outstanding credit so much that for the first time in a while the National Savings rate was not negative but positive. If consumers are paying off credit, then, obviously, ipso-facto, they are consuming less.
Less consumption on their part means companies meet the Demand for goods and services without expanding production capacity - so there is no Job Creation (or, lesser JC).
Which means what?
It means we have to wait for the Feel-Good-Factor to reinstall itself across American’s households. The F-G-F is what spikes consumer propensity-to-spend, which is the alpha and the omega of all economies. Except, of course, when consumers do binge-spending due to cheap credit and thus indebt themselves far too much and respond by contracting spending. Which is the heart of any recession.
When the contraction in spending becomes massive, it is known as a Great Recession.
GOOD NEWS
And there are some good signs that the F-G-F is on its way back. See here .
So … go out and buy something. Anything. Preferably not Chinese. Like some consumer good Made in America! If you can find it …
Report thisBy Robespierre115, June 29, 2011 at 10:15 pm Link to this comment
This article had nothing valuable to say. Let’s hope Chris Hedges comes back with a brilliant analysis as he did last year with the excellent piece “The Greeks Get It.” This is class warfare, the world needs to think outside of the impose parameters of the last 20 years.
Report thisBy KP, June 29, 2011 at 8:09 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
A brilliant article—thank you.
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