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| The Greek parliament. Picture credit: Wikipedia |
Roughly every six to eight weeks, excluding holidays, the Greek governments from Mr. George Papandreou's administration hitherto (from the start of the crisis that is), have been approving one 'austerity' package after another under the explicit threat that in the absence of these measures, Greece will be plunged into chaos.
Indeed the narrative has always been that unless 'austerity' is approved all of tartarus will break loose. Alas even though these policies are being implemented, the fate which is ostensibly sought to be avoided—chaos—is all that is brought upon the people residing in Greece.
Measures and methods that very few, if any, genuinely endorse are approved and used under stressful and desperate conditions, without any coherent strategy in place and a fortiriori without any knowledge of where this path leads to. The sad reality is that no government ever had any coherent plan to respond to the rising challenges, in part because the entire discussion was predicated on false political assumptions and presumptuous economic doctrines.
Unfortunately relatively few in Greece had the audacity to speak the one and only truth concerning the finances of the state: namely that the debts which were incurred by a kleptocracy, could not—and should not—be paid back, for they constituted an odious debt; and because what would be required to cover them, would effectively amount to the impoverishment, immiseration and deprivation of the vast majority of people residing in Greece, excluding of course the political elite with all of its corporate cronies.
Instead of conducting a thoroughgoing audit of the entire "national debt" (state debt), prior to any agreement with any foreign party or "partner(s)", to discern what was legitimate and what was not; the Greek governments from Mr. Papandreou's to Mr. Samaras' have all been clinging on to an inane and self-defeating illusion that certain measures will be enough to fulfill the troika's narrow-sighted demands and meet its delusional fiscal and macroeconomic targets.
The latest manifestation of this wildly unrealistic belief, is on extending the bailout programme for another couple of years, with the pretense that extra time is all that is necessary to fulfill the obligations that were envisaged in the memoranda with the troika of official lenders (EU-ECB-IMF).
Several politicians across Europe, who apparently have no idea of what will be the economic and social effects of this proposal, in Greece and beyond, or who consciously seek to obfuscate reality and to perpetuate the myth of solidarity; are in favor of extending the bailout programme, with the conviction that this is all the Greek government needs to meet its obligations as these were enshrined in the bailout programme.
In such statements it is tacitly assumed that there is absolutely nothing amiss with the bailout programme as such, nor is there any real concern about imposing yet more tax hikes and in further reducing the purchasing power of individuals in Greece, in the midst of a depression; all this while in parallel the ECB is long-now implementing an inflationary policy that has sustained all toxic debts at the expense of zombifying the banking system; a policy which in this respect, increases the burdens on the lower and middle parts of the income distribution, statolatric litanies to the contrary notwithstanding.
There is, in other words, no comprehension of the fact that the real economy is being torn apart on both the fiscal and the monetary sides. On the fiscal front any disposable incomes are being drastically diminished to sustain a hypertrophic state and to keep alive the fantasies of the troika; while on the monetary side all channels to any affordable credit remain hermetically shut for the vast majority of individual economic actors, or more fully, remain open to a privileged banking elite, which uses whatever funds it borrows from the Eurosystem to either increase its capital adequacy or to speculate in the sovereign bonds market (to speculate against citizens/taxpayers that is).
Behold an inflationary depression that caters only to the particular interests of a corporate elite! Any syllogism or lemma which provides a patina of rationality to such or related policies is uneconomic, socially pernicious and politically catastrophic. What we are dealing with here is a systemic failure, or on a different note, a case of appalling state failures.
In response to the reveries of politicians in Greece and across Europe who expect from a mere two year extension the magical solution to a systemic crisis; it must be stressed that such a talismanic tool does not exist in the panoply of the troika and that Greece does not need more time to implement an ill-advised bailout programme. The more time it has, the more invidious the end result will be. This ought not be interpreted as an obstinate opposition to genuine reforms, but only as a realization that these much-needed changes will never come from the troika's schemes, nor from domestic political parties who are long-now bankrupt in the realm of ideas and who may only perpetuate their vegetative intellectual existence at the expense of almost all people in society.
Greece (Europe) needs a completely different approach, away from pro-cyclical, depressionary policies; a strategy which is profoundly different from what are, or appears to be the apocryphal desires of the political, technocratic and plutocratic elite of Europe. Whether this will ever be realized, for Greece and for all other countries facing similar challenges, actually depends on the open-minded initiatives of people who are strangers to the stratagems that now shape Europe's (grim) future.
Looking at the Greek interior, I myself fear of the worst, though not out of an anxiety that "reforms" may not be implemented thoroughly, but because in the pursuit of chimeras, Greeks and their European partners created a monster that may well devour us all. This is no other than the irrational exuberance of a population that resorts to despicable 'we-they' syndromes as its last refuge in avoiding insanity. Exponentially more people are finding solace in a state of mind that is already engendering nationalistic, xenophobic and misanthropic attitudes and will one day possibly bring to power those whose very ideology is found on hatred and whose sole raison d'être is to sow terror and bring destruction.
With great sadness I and so many others are in fact bearing witness to the entropy of the Greek society. We see a human-made calamity unfolding before our eyes; a disaster whose deleterious effects have yet to be revealed to us in their totality, even though they have provided us with premonitions of more pain, suffering and agony.
Article source: http://www.protesilaos.com/2012/11/entropy-greek-society.html
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Your article is depressing and very pessimistic but alas I could not agree with you more. Not only on this side of the pond but on the other we are seeing events unfold that are going to see the West continue it's economic, social and political downward spiral. The outcome of which cannot be predicted with any certainty but will we know not be pleasant. Our leaders have proved themselves time after time to be inept yet we keep on returning the same ones or at least the same type to government. In France they voted for Hollande in the US for Obama and soon in the UK they will vote for Miliband (not that the alternatives are much better just less worse). It appears turkeys will vote for Christmas if you make them believe it is for all the presents they are going to get. To be honest the people deserve the leaders they get as they constantly vote for failure. Telling them that if you vote for failure then all you get is failure does not appear to be a message that most want to hear.
ReplyDeleteThere is a number of things wrong in Greece but blaming the goverments of the past 2 years for everything ,is not the answer.They are not the only responsible parties. Only a small number of the austerity meassures have been implimented.In fact the austerity packages that we accuse troika for,it is the same package of rules that we didn`t enforce over the years.It keeps repeating itself again and again.The package gets worst every time .And people object to everything again and again.I have the suspision that if a package that was to award everybody with 300 euros passed in parliament,people will go on strike against it
ReplyDeleteYou are correct. Indeed blaming the recent governments is wrong, because the problems of Greece are structural and endemic, tracing their roots back to decades past. This is something I should have been more careful in pointing out, as it essentially is what I also think of the broader "Greek crisis", at least in as far as the internal flaws are concerned.
ReplyDeleteYes the package is in effect the same and as you said it comes back again all the time until it is finally implemented in full. The only problem, as you also understanding by noting that it keeps getting worse, is that it keeps returning despite the fact that economic conditions are deteriorating. In other words, while it might theoretically be perfectly fine, it draws out the specific political, economic and social context. For instance after all these years we still cannot say with certainty whether Greece will stay in the euro area or not, so with what kind of "appetite" will the people stomach more of the same, especially if they expect that their efforts will be in vain? Part of the blame certainly falls on Greek politicians/governments, but the overall political condition in Europe is not all that much better when it comes to self-contradictions.
On your last point on dogmatic rejectionism I certainly agree with you. Greece certainly needs thoroughgoing, genuine reforms. But for that to happen, Greeks themselves must understand that they need to adopt to a new way of life and revise whatever modus operandi they used to have towards a much more sustainable alternative (without overlooking other changes that need to take place of course).
Yes we keep repeating the same policies over and over again, but we only apply new labels, thinking that forms are what matters and not substance. Indeed in that sense much of what we see happening is our own doing (and undoing).
ReplyDeleteThe policies are basecally the same.That is why a coalition is possible.In the US,democrats and republicans have to work together in order to achieve goals.In UK,France, and the rest of Europe,discussion between parties is the only answer.Nobody is better than anybody else.People can see the solution from different prespectives,but it is always the same.The difference between political parties is what proportion of the population they want to favor.The more parties work together ,the biggest the proportion of favor.We all live together in this world.The biggest problem of all,is the presumption that we are better and therefore worth more than others
ReplyDeleteIndeed. That is why we do politics and that's the reason we need to have them as inclusive/democratic as possible so that all views are taken into account, in order to avoid jungle methods.
ReplyDeleteThis however does not mean that we all together never make wrong decisions, but I guess all errors can be corrected over time if there is good will.