snow hope wrote:emordnilap wrote:
The IMF is using its outmoded and discredited tactics and demands: hitting the poor with VAT increases, hammering pensions, emasculating unions, rampant privatisation etc etc.
I don't disagree. But the Greeks, under the previously elected Government, chose to agree to the loans and conditions associated with them.
This agreement cannot be undone willy nilly. Anybody who thinks this is simply being unrealistic. They can try to argue (as they are) to new agreements and changed conditions, but if the other party will not agree then they cannot do it unilaterally. End of story. That is the way the world works.
The Greeks need to get more real!
You know as well as I do that previous government was little more than a bunch of EU Troika shills who were shoe-horned in. And what, exactly, does "get more real" mean? You do understand that in any economic area where, for whatever geographical/historical reason, once part of that area generates more money than another part, then the money get's redistributed as debt via the banking system? It is as inevitable as night follows day. Indeed, in the case of the EU, it was actively encouraged by the German central bank because of all of the restrictions on lax lending practices in Germany itself. In other words, whilst the German central bank was unhappy about the German banks taking a shit in their own back yard, they were more than happy for them to do so in their neighbours yard. Especially so given the boost it gave to German GDP as all of that Greek debt was able to pay for shiny new German BMWs, railways, and all the rest.
The only way the above get mitigated is by having absolutely identical financial regulations across the entire area, alongside wealth redistribution mechanisms via tax collection and allocation. In other words, a fully United States of Europe. Imagine, for a minute, how much worse would be the economic disparity between the south East of England and the rest of the UK if we did not have those mechanisms in play here. But we don't have that in Europe. Instead, we have the worst of all worlds. One where countries do not have the freedom to devalue their own currencies and or change their own interest rates to stimulate economic activity. But, at the same time do not have the protection of all of the wealth redistribution mechanisms that come with a fully integrated state.
This crisis was inevitable and if it hadn't been Greece it would have been somewhere else.