How
Europe Played Greece
Do
these things, they said, for all our sakes and you will return to
prosperity with our help. They lied.
By
Alex Andreou
3
July, 2014
"They
have decided to strangle us, whether we say yes or no", said a
Greek woman to me yesterday. "The only choice we have is to make
it quick or slow. I will vote "oxi" (no). We are
economically dead anyway. I might as well have my conscience clear
and my pride intact."
Her
view is not atypical among friends and relations I have canvassed in
the last few days. Trust has evaporated. Faith in European
Institutions is thin on the ground. Lines have been crossed. At times
of financial strain, a country's currency issuer, its central bank,
should act as lender of last resort and prime technocratic
negotiator. In Greece's case, the European Central Bank, sits on the
same side as the creditors; acts as their enforcer. This is
unprecedented.
The
ECB has acted to asphyxiate the Greek economy - the ultimate
blackmail to force subordination. The money is there, in our
accounts, but we cannot have access to it, because the overseers of
our own banking system, the very people who some months ago issued
guarantees of liquidity, have decided to deny liquidity. We have
phantom money, but no real money. There is a terrifying poetry to
that, since the entire crisis was caused by too much phantom money in
the first place.
EU
Institutions are now openly
admitting that their aim is regime change.
A coup d'état in anything by name, using banks instead of tanks and
a corrupt media as the occupiers' broadcaster. The rest of Europe
stands back and watches. Those leaders who promised the Syriza
government support before the election, have ducked for cover. I
understand it. They sympathise, but they don't want to be next.
They
are honourable cowards. They look at the punishment beating being
meted out and their instinct is to protect their own.
Many
people within Greece have the same reaction. "[Tsipras] is an
idealist", a friend wrote, "but I don't know whether
idealism has the power to change reality. Life has shown me the
opposite to be true. I will vote "yes", with tears in my
eyes. I will be another Brutus."
This
tacit collusion, both within Greece and around Europe and the World,
with the economic waterboarding being administered to a country on
its knees, is made possible by a single politically expedient
narrative: That Greece deserves to suffer and should just pay its
debts. It is the single most common comment I have had on social
media. And the most bitter to swallow.
Corruption
and tax evasion had been rife for decades. Accounts were falsified in
order to facilitate entry into the Euro. Unforgivable economic crimes
were committed. These weren't committed by most ordinary people of
course - the very people now asked to take on the burden of the
follies of our rich oligarchs.
Corrupt politicians who passed the country back and forth like a joint were quick to secure their money in Swiss bank accounts. But we must share in a collective responsibility for them. We all knew what was going on and we either became part of it or didn't rebel soon enough or loudly enough.
Corrupt politicians who passed the country back and forth like a joint were quick to secure their money in Swiss bank accounts. But we must share in a collective responsibility for them. We all knew what was going on and we either became part of it or didn't rebel soon enough or loudly enough.
Those
factors are what put us on the front line when the global financial
crisis began to unfold within the Eurozone. All those systemic flaws
are what made Greece the weak link when the earthquake hit. But
we didn't cause the earthquake. We just lived in creaking houses
that went down easily.
The
idea that Greece has not paid a heavy price for those sins, is
fiction. In the last five years, we have made adjustments which
reduced a 15% deficit to zero, while the economy contracted by a
quarter. Incomes fell by over a third. Pensions were slashed by 40%.
18,000 people are sleeping rough in Athens alone today.
Many are reported to have committed suicide explicitly because of financial worries. The Church is raising children in orphanages. Almost a third of the population are living below the poverty line.
Many are reported to have committed suicide explicitly because of financial worries. The Church is raising children in orphanages. Almost a third of the population are living below the poverty line.
These
catastrophic shifts would have been unfathomable for most economies.
It is only because family and societal bonds are so strong, that we
do not mourn triple the number of victims. There is no moral
hazard to any debt write-off or restructure. Not a single Greek
person will say: "Great! That was easy."
Greece
should have been allowed to default in 2010. Default is a normal part
of debt, not some monstrously catastrophic event. Germany has
defaulted on its debts four times in the last century. Italy six.
Default is reflected in interest differentials. An element of
interest on a loan is of course "rent" for using someone
else's money, but the reason Germany's government 10y bonds trade at
below 1% and Venezuela's at over 24% is not whim. It reflects risk.
Removing that risk is the real moral hazard.
"Stop
whining and pay what you owe." "Nobody forced you to take
the loans in the first place." "Why should taxpayers
elsewhere pay for your extravagance?" There was some truth to
all of those things back in 2010. There is no truth to them now.
We were forced
to take the loans. That is precisely what
happened. We were told "do this for all of us", to avoid
contagion. Less
than 10% of the "Greek" bailout has gone to Greece.
The rest has gone to strengthen irresponsible financial institutions,
mainly French and German, which were heavily expose.
There
was no provision within the Eurozone for what happens if market shock
creates sudden and dramatic divergence between countries' economic
cycles.
We were no longer individually in charge of basic economic
levers like quantitative easing or devaluing our currency - a
standard response in those circumstances. Our fates were entangled.
We could either devalue the whole of the currency which would help
countries severely affected by the crisis or not devalue which would
help countries like Germany which were in a more robust position. We
were told: "do this and we will look after you". Whatever
it takes, said
Mario Draghi,
to convince Greece to take yet another loan.
Markets
smelt blood and there was indecent speculation which made things much
worse. This is what Chancellor Merkel said
in February 2010 about
the crisis:
“The debt that had to be accumulated, when it’s
going badly, is now becoming the object of speculation by precisely
those institutions that we saved a year-and-a-half ago. That’s very
difficult to explain to people in a democracy who should trust us.”
Where
is that narrative now? When was it replaced exclusively by lazy,
profligate Greeks making life difficult for everyone else? History
is being rewritten.
The
IMF report, published
yesterday,
vindicates Syriza's position almost entirely. Greece's debt is not
viable, it says. The approach of "austerity
first, debt relief maybe" was
a disaster. Another programme of cuts without debt restructuring
would be so counter-productive that the IMF refuses to be part of it.
Will the world listen now? Or is the idea that somewhere in Greece
there is a mattress stuffed with a trillion Euros which we are simply
refusing to hand over out of ideology?
Greece
feels betrayed. The people "in the know" assured us that if
we did as they instructed, the situation will improve. It didn't. It
got worse. And then worse again. We agreed to buy back our own
debt at a premium and, by doing so, gave time to large financial
interests to disentangle themselves from Greece, to put buffers
against contagion. Now they don't care. Greece was played. We were
convinced to get in a lifeboat full of holes and now Europe wants to
set us adrift.
The
people of Europe need to realise that they were all played, too.
Taxpayers' money was pumped, not
into Greece, but into failing banks,
like everywhere else. Profit has been privatised and risk
nationalised. They need to stop blaming the canary for coming up from
the mine half dead.
The
EU's behaviour over the Greek Referendum on Sunday is telling.
Everyone agrees that corruption at the highest levels and chronic tax
evasion were Greece's downfall. And yet, instead of cheering a
government that, despite ideological differences, is prepared to
tackle those things, they have employed any unconstitutional and
undemocratic means necessary to overthrow it. They are actively
trying to install a government formed of the very corrupt entities
that stripped the country like locusts for four decades.
The
message from Brussels and Berlin is very clear: We would rather deal
with corrupt but obedient leaders, than honest ones with ideas of
sovereignty. Your vote is irrelevant. Democracy is irrelevant.
There
are consequences beyond the financial. If Europe chooses to create a
failed state on the edge of its borders, with a Middle East and North
Africa ablaze and a Russia and China looking to expand their
influence, the fallout will be unpredictable. Psychologically, too,
they have damaged the European Project, probably beyond repair.
Punishing a member state for having done precisely as instructed,
will make every other state feel unsafe; make them question whether
they are next.
"Come
be part of the European Family", they said. Many are now
realising that the family in question were The Borgias.
How
the euro caused the Greek crisis
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