The BBC, the scumbags that they are, and source of this latest interview with Varoufakis in their report on this provide only a 44 second segment.
Any news outlet worth its name would have published the entire internview
Any news outlet worth its name would have published the entire internview
Varoufakis
Slams Bailout #3 As "Greatest Macroeconomic Disaster In History"
While Tsipras "Doesn't Eat Or Sleep"
19
July, 2015
In
an rare convergence of Greek and German viewpoints, overnight former
Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis told
the BBC that
"economic reforms imposed on his country by creditors are "going
to fail", ahead of talks on a huge bailout. At the same time,
Germany's most noted Eurosceptic, Hans-Werner Sinn, in an interview
with the newspaper "Passauer Neue Presse"
also earlier today warned that any new aid would be "totally
worthless" and "would never come back."
In
what was practically a race who can find harsher terms to describe
the Greek bailout, Varoufakis said that Greece was subject to a
programme that will "go
down in history as the greatest disaster of macroeconomic management
ever".
As reported yesterday, the German parliament approved the opening of negotiations of Greece's third €86 billion bailout when it rushed to vote through a bridge loan to Greece so the insolvent nation had some funds to repay the ECB's Monday debt maturity, as well as repay the roughly €2 billion for Greece is in default to the IMF. Of note was the jump in German MPs who voted "no" to 119 from just 32 in the February vote to extend the Greek bailout.
In
a damning assessment, Varoufakis told the BBC's Mark Lobel: "This
programme is going to fail whoever undertakes its implementation."
Asked
how long that would take, he replied: "It has failed already."
He
also said Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who has admitted that
he does not believe in the bailout, had little option but to sign.
"We
were given a choice between being executed and capitulating. And he
decided that capitulation was the ultimate strategy."
Which
also happens to be Varoufakis' biggest failure: his strategy was
accurate and his math was correct that to Europe a Grexit would be
far more expensive than keeping Greece in the Euro, however Europe
was just as accurate in realizing Greece has no Plan B for its
banking system as Greece had never prepared either a plan for a
parallel currency nor how to obtain Debtor in Possession funding,
which is what a bankrupt Greece would need - ostensibly either from
China or Russia - to fund it in the interim period in which it was
ending its tumultuous relationship with Europe.
Understandably
Greece did not want to push the Grexit line too hard for obvious
reasons - it was all part of the "blame game" - however now
that Germany itself has opened a Pandora's box it can't close ever
again when it brought up the possibility of a temporary Grexit,
Greece should most certainly prepare for the worst case the next time
it has to rerun the entire bailout tragedy in 6-9 months, or perhaps
sooner.
However,
none of this will be Varoufakis' problem any more - instead we hope
his successor learns from Yanis' mistakes. And speaking of his
successors, late yesterday Tsipras has announced a cabinet reshuffle,
sacking several ministers who voted against the reforms in parliament
this week. But
he opted not to bring in technocrats or opposition politicians as
replacements.
As
a result, it now seems that Tsipras will preside over ministers who,
like himself, harbor serious doubts about the reform program. Which
is why we truly hope they are prepared to implement the missing Plan
B when the time comes next.
Finally,
in what is perhaps the best anecdote about Greece right now, AFP
reported that "embattled Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
eats and sleeps poorly and rarely manages to see his family, his
mother told a tabloid on Saturday."
"Alexis
lately does not eat, does not sleep, but he has no choice -- he has a
debt to the people who put their faith in him," Aristi
Tsipras, 73, told Parapolitika weekly.
"I
rarely see him any more. He goes from the airport straight to
parliament. He has no time to see his children, how can he see me?"
Aristi Tsipras said.
"When
we speak, I tell him to do the best for the country and take care of
himself. He tells me not to worry, and that everything will be fine,"
she said.
Unfortunately
it won't be, however that will only be revealed when not only the PM
can "no longer eat or sleep", but the entire country of
Greece, too.
‘Greatest
disaster’: Varoufakis says new Greek bailout doomed
RT,
18
July, 2015
Former
Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis has warned that the economic
reforms from Greece’s debt holders are doomed to fail. The
assessment comes as PM Alexis Tsipras has reshuffled his cabinet in
efforts to secure a third bailout package.
The
EU is preparing to start talks with Athens on a third bailout which
could reach €86 billion ($93 billion), but the reform program laid
down by Brussels as a precondition for the bailout will "go down
in history as the greatest disaster of macroeconomic management
ever," Varoufakis told BBC.
“This
programme is going to fail whoever undertakes its implementation,” he
said. Asked when will it fail, he replied, “It
has failed already.”
Varoufakis
stressed that in given conditions Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who
himself does not believe in the bailout, had little option but to
sign the agreement.
“We
were given a choice between being executed and capitulating. And he
decided that capitulation was the ultimate strategy,” Varoufakis
said.
On
Saturday, new cabinet ministers were sworn in after Tsipras replaced
hardliners in his government, following the agreement with the EU
creditors.
Energy
Minister Panagiotis Lafazanis and his two deputies were sacked.
Lafazanis has been replaced by Panos Skourletis, who initially
appointed the Minister of Labour and Social Solidarity in January.
The
reshuffle marked “an
adjustment by the government to a new reality,” said
Skourletis.
Germany’s
parliament approved the beginning of the talks on a third Greek
bailout on Friday. In order to secure it, Greece will have to
implement further unpopular austerity measures.
“Our
aim is to negotiate hard for the terms of the agreement, not just to
seal it, but on how it will be implemented. There are many vague
terms in the text,"
George
Katrougalos, who was appointed Labor Minister in the latest
reshuffle, told RT
Katrougalos
said that the end of austerity is “the
only realistic promise,” because “austerity
feeds recession.”
©
Alkis Konstantinidis, Reuters
“It
is the balance of power at the European level that forces us to
accept the agreement, because an alternative would be a continuation
of the closure of the banks and practically the sudden death of our
economy,” said
Katrougalos, adding that the Greek government is not happy with the
agreement that has been enforced upon the country.
Katrougalos
said that by agreeing with Europe, the Greek government was not
backtracking from its promises to the people and that the public
referendum that rejected the EU’s tough conditions was necessary to
show the European elites that there are alternatives to their
economic policies.
Another
aim of the referendum was to “protect
our government from a soft coup d’etat that aimed to overthrow
us,”Katrougalos
told RT.
“We
hope that in the future we can have a better balance of power [within
Europe] to shift the existing one in the favor of the progressive,
social Europe,” Katrougalos
concluded.
The
EU-Greece talks are not going to be easy and will take up to four
weeks, warned the head of the eurogroup of finance ministers, Jeroen
Dijsselbloem.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.