As far as academic economists are concerned, Prof. Steve Keen, presently in exile from Down Under, is one of my favourites.
Here
he is talking about Yanis Yaroufakis
Talking about Yanis on the BBC
I
was interviewed twice on the BBC yesterday about YanisVaroufakis and Syriza’s attempts to resolve its debt crisis
with the EU–once on the BBC News Channel and once on BBC World
News. The video clips are below. Click here to see Yanis’s “modestproposal” for resolving the crisis.
To
watch the BBC interviews GO HERE
The great Greek hope
As
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras continues his whirlwind tour of
Europe seeking support for his debt relief policies, the onus is on
key EU players to figure out compromises, writes James K. Galbraith.
4
February, 2015
Fifty-four
years ago in his inaugural address President John F. Kennedy
declared, "Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never
fear to negotiate." They were not the most soaring sentences in
that short speech. But they signaled, deliberately and unmistakably
to the Soviet Union, that the Cold War might be ended without turning
hot, and the world need not live forever under bluster, threat, and
in the shadow of nuclear war.
Today,
Europe faces a negotiation over debt and depression. On one side
there will be the young government of Greece. On the other, the
financial powers of Europe and the world. Now as then, threats are in
the air.
The
Daily Telegraph summarized the EU finance ministers meeting on
January 26: "The eurozone has ruled out debt forgiveness for
Greece..." At Davos Angela Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert
said that Greece must "[hold] to its prior commitments and that
the new government [must] be tied in to the reform's achievements."
On January 28 the ECB's Erkki Liikanen warned that liquidity
assistance to Greek banks may be cut off.
Or
as Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble put it last December, "New
elections change nothing."
Don't
be cruel
To
Greeks these comments must be a cruel joke. What economic recovery?
What achievements? If elections change nothing, why bother to hold
them? And of course what Syriza's victory drove home, above all, is
the unanswerable point that failed policies must be changed.
There
are two issues: the agreements and the debt. On the first, the
experiment of troika control has been tried. The results are in.
Greece is now charting a new path. New policies to help the destitute
and vulnerable, to stabilize the economy and to foster recovery, will
be put in place. These policies don't require European approval, but
a restructuring of the debt does, and that would help them succeed.
On
the debt, the reality is that losses have already occurred; a debt
that cannot be paid will not be. So it is in part a matter of whether
to accept the reality or to continue to deny it. The problem with the
second choice is that "extend and pretend" piles debt on
debt, depressing activity, investment and growth. A restructuring
gives breathing room. The form and precise terms are a matter for
discussion and that, in part, what negotiation is about.
Europe's
bargaining tools
The
European powers hold three cudgels as negotiations start: the
financing of the debts, the Emergency Liquidity Assistance of the
European Central Bank, and the fact that Quantitative Easing gives
the ECB a new way to insulate the rest of Europe from Greece's
agonies. These cudgels can be used to enforce a policy of threats and
confrontation. It is now clear however that the Greek government will
not fold under these threats.
What
leverage does Greece have? Not much; the heavy weapons are on the
other side. But there is something. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and
his team can present the case of reason without threats of any kind.
Then the right and moral gesture on the other side would be to throw
the three cudgels away, and in particular to grant fiscal space and
to guarantee Greek financial stability while talks are underway.
If
that happens, then proper negotiations can proceed.
Beware
of Greeks bearing gifts?
Already
the approach of reason has shown some signs of working, in the
mission of Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis to France, Britain and
Italy, and in the cordial remarks about Greece of President Barack
Obama. In Paris Varoufakis quoted the dictum of Jean Monnet: success
will come when the two sides sit together, and put the problem "on
the other side of the table." Now the question becomes: will
Germany sit with Greece, putting the problem on the other side of the
table?
It's
possible. So far, Chancellor Merkel has made some of the mildest
comments of any German politician. She has for instance said that she
does not contemplate a debt write-down, but not that she will never
consider debt relief. One may assume these words are chosen with
care. Possibly she wishes to maintain enough flexibility so as to be
able to strike a deal. Surely she understands that the choices she
makes - very soon - will determine Europe's future.
In
this situation, both halves of Kennedy's dictum - drafted for him, by
the way, by my father - apply. Greece must not be compelled to
negotiate from fear. And Germany, for its part, must not fear to
negotiate - calmly and in good faith. The historic players from both
sides will meet soon, and the world, for the moment, waits in hope.
James
K. Galbraith is Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. Chair in Government/Business
Relations and Professor of Government at the Lyndon B. Johnson School
of Public Affairs, The University of Texas at Austin. He is the
author of "The End of Normal: The Great Crisis and the Future of
Growth."
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