Greece won't be able to make its austerity policies stick and, as the global depression worsens, will have to leave the eurozone
Costas Lapavitsas guardian.co.uk,
Monday 16 July 2012 14.54 BST

A discount euro shop in Athens. Greece is ‘in the midst of an unprecedented depression, made largely in Brussels'.
The June summit of the eurozone was initially trumpeted as a decisive step towards resolving the crisis. Italy and Spain won agreement to allow European institutions to recapitalise banks and purchase sovereign debt directly.
But once financial markets had a closer look, it became clear that little of substance had been achieved, and the borrowing costs of Italy and Spain again approached forbidding heights. Meanwhile the Spanish government has imposed fresh austerity, breaking its promises to the electorate. And unemployment in the eurozone continues to rise, exceeding 11% on average.
It is now a fair guess that the European Monetary Union (or the eurozone) has crossed the Rubicon and is heading towards breakup or collapse. In the periphery of Greece, Portugal, Ireland and Spain, there is despair at the ever-deepening recession. In France and Italy there is burgeoning opposition to long-term austerity. In Germany there is frustration at feckless southerners.
Disintegration is likely to take a turn for the worse in 2013, as a global slump is in the offing. The large economies of Europe, including the UK, are entering recession largely due to austerity policies. The US economy is veering towards negative territory, as Barack Obama's expansionary policies were never vigorous enough. China is facing a hard landing that will force a re-examination of its growth strategy. The international financial system, meanwhile, remains weak and unreformed.
After three years of festering, truly drastic action is now required. Peripheral countries must abandon austerity as part of a Europe-wide programme to raise productivity, financial institutions must be taken into public ownership, and debt written off. But it is unthinkable that Europe's current political leaders would embark on such changes. Hidebound by neoliberal economics, they will continue with austerity, privatisation and liberalisation. The financial markets have sensed it and are preparing for disaster.
The disaster is likely to start in Greece. The country is in the midst of an unprecedented depression, made largely in Brussels. In 2012 output is likely to contract by 7% to 9%, on top of about 14% in 2008-11. Not surprisingly, the bailout programme is again missing its targets as recession has reduced tax revenues.
Yet the EU is insisting that the country should stick with the failed programme by imposing huge cuts in public expenditure in 2012-14. The aim is to achieve a primary surplus at the earliest date. If the cuts do take place and a global slump does indeed materialise, the Greek economy will contract ruthlessly in 2013, even by 10%. It would be an economic and social catastrophe, especially as unemployment is already at 23%, including 52% for the youth.
The present Greek government, formed out of the establishment parties of New Democracy and Pasok with the addition of the ardent Europeanist Dimar, is incapable of dealing with the crisis. They won the June election by playing on middle-class fears about returning to the drachma and losing savings.
They also cynically promised to renegotiate bailout terms knowing full well that renegotiation was impossible as long as the framework of the bailout was accepted. In practice, they are about to impose the spending cuts demanded by the EU, while liberalising closed professions and selling public assets in the ludicrous hope of boosting growth.
The government is unlikely to survive for long. As depression worsens in the next six months to a year, Greece will again confront the impossibility of sticking with bailout policies.
This time the decision is likely to be final, with profound implications for the ruling elite that took the country into the EMU on a wing and a prayer. The elite is now watching in horror as its strategy is falling apart, and seems incapable of devising an alternative path.
But Greece is unlikely to attempt suicide: at some point it will default on its debts and exit the EMU. There will then be a genuinely new government, perhaps formed by the left, which will navigate the chaos and guide the rebuilding of economy and society. Once Greece has made its move, the unravelling of the EMU will probably start in full earnest.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/jul/16/euro-endgame-begin-greece
By: gemini
In: Regional News
Tags: euro, crisis
Marked as: approved
Views: 1061 | Comments: 30 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
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Turns out, collapsing the Euro was far easier than collapsing the dollar.
Well no fear, the dollar is right behind you :)
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByR3PLIC4N7D3CK4RD (98.80) 
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they'll have to leave and it might be better for them. They'll probably have to float their currency which will make it cheaper but MUCH more competitive than the euro in some aspects.I wish they would have left sooner. They probably would have done better than most euro countries and those countries they were doing better than would leave in hopes of competing with their own currency. This could be a good opportunity for a country to make a sound currency and test it. Theres no better time.
Posted Jul-17-2012 Byabsu69 (2112.84) absu69 View Channel Send Message
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@GERMANY_PREVAILS you finally said something that makes sense...congrats
Posted Jul-17-2012 Byeeep (870.58) 
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Europe will be a third world with 100 years.
Posted Jul-17-2012 Bytruebrit49 (272.22) 
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Fuck the governments of the world.
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByLickMyDuck (540.90)

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We only have one planet with finite resources for which to sustain human civilization.
Capitalism has grown so fat that it has nothing left to eat.
But the politicians still demand more growth.
Perhaps it's time for a change towards a new sustainable system?
Or maybe it's time for anarchy!
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByBaxta76 (154.50)

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@SacredVow They aren't meant to pay back. That's the point.
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByR3PLIC4N7D3CK4RD (98.80) 
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@SacredVow Debt is never meant to be paid back. No matter the country.
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByR3PLIC4N7D3CK4RD (98.80) 
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and in my country goverment is steamrolling ESM-s abolishing baselaws and overuling public oppinion.
Posted Jul-17-2012 Bytaipohh (82.46) 
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I feel sorry for Greeks but they had it coming. Hope they get better soon.
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByHarp (26.10) Harp View Channel Send Message
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I think now is a good time to by a nice house over looking the ocean in Greece.
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByWEEDBENDER (283.30) WEEDBENDER View Channel Send Message
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I hear Greece is beautiful, I am guessing when it calms down it will be tourist hotspot because of the exchange rates.
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByKmanbay (689.36) Kmanbay View Channel Send Message
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Let me see here, a country is in debt and can't afford to pay it's obligations and there economy has tanked. So the solution is to lend it more money they couldn't pay in the first place. With a tanked economy, how are they gonna pay this new loan off as well. LOFL, This is all a deception to ice the cake, to buy alittle more time so that the plan for the entire world falls into place. Any moron knows that you don't lend to someone who has trouble paying in the first place. Go ahead, default on More..
Posted Jul-17-2012 Byvirtualdesires (492.94) virtualdesires View Channel Send Message
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dont worrie the elite will fix everything with a big war in the middel east
Posted Jul-17-2012 ByMR tommygun (460.20) 
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I agree with Tommygun,.NATO and all the other Countries in the alliance will wage war against any Muslims that don't like us,and that is pretty much all of them,.it will begin with conflicts with Syria,Iran,Pakistan,India,Russia, and all the other players,.it will be big and bloody,.
Posted Jul-17-2012 BySharkGuy (1509.50) SharkGuy View Channel Send Message
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