The day after the
Greek left-center party SYRIZA won the election of January 2015, optimism ran
across Europe’s progressive quarters, while the conservatives and neoliberals
acr4oss the world insisted the new regime was extreme left and it would invite
disaster. Just a few short weeks after that election, the world knows that
SYRIZA was indeed a center-left regime, one trying to introduce some modest
reforms in a bankrupt nation whose future is really the past of even greater
dependence instead of the future of greater national sovereignty in all domains
from economy to defense.
Greece has always
(1832-present) been a debtor country, always suffered balance of payments
deficits, always been a dependency of a Great Power, first Great Britain, then
the US and more recently Germany. This was true of the Balkans that were
northwest Europe equivalent of what Central America has been to the US. The
larger question in the 21st century for Greece is not whether it will
remain a dependency as it always has been, and it is not whether Greece can be
elevated to the status of Belgium that is about the same as Greece in terms of
population but has twice the GDP of Greece and much higher living standards. The
future of Greece is actually the past, a reversal to the Cold War when Greece
was an economically weak country on the periphery of Europe. Germany has made
it clear that it wants Greece to be in line with the rest of the Balkans in
terms of living standards, which means several notches down from pre-austerity
levels. Therefore, continued EU integration entails not raising but lowering living
standards, not greater national sovereignty but much less.
What are the
possible choices for Greece in this post-Cold War environment of globalization
and neo-liberalism?
a) The Greek
Communist Party KKE favors the road to Communism by nationalizing everything,
repudiating the national debt, exiting NATO, EU, IMF, and all treaties and
obligation. How realistic is this scenario at this point in history, and what
is the percentage of the people who would support it? Considering that the
Greek Communist Party has about 5% of the vote, this scenario is highly unrealistic
and public support would not go above 20% at best even if the KKE came to power
by magic. International isolation would be its fate and without a
“Chinese-style sponsor” like North Korea has, the regime would fall.
b) Through the
conviction of their ideals, Greek SYRIZA (center-leftist ruling party) can try
to change the euro zone and the German-imposed patron-client integration model.
This is actually what SYRIZA promised before the election of January 2015,
along with a long list of social and economic measures it has failed to adopt
because the EU will not permit them. The idea that Greece can change the
German-imposed patron-client integration model and the current neo-liberal
course of the euro zone is even more unrealistic than going Communist. Integration
models are not subject to change by the weak debtor client countries whose only
option is to abandon the integration model and see if it can survive.
c) Greece could stay
the course with austerity and neo-liberal policies that have ruined the economy
in the last five years. With weak health care, educational system, and social
security, the social fabric has come unglued resulting in one-third of the
people near or under the poverty line. One result is a polarized society with
the neo-Nazi party becoming the third most popular. As pessimistic as this
sounds it is actually the most likely scenario not because people believe the
promises about light at the end of the tunnel, but because they fear disaster
if they dare leave the tunnel.
d) Greece could try
to switch patrons and see the degree to which China and Russia would be
interested in becoming the new patrons. However, Russia is facing financial
problems of its own, and China would not want to alienate either Western Europe
by making Greece a Chinese financial dependency or the US that has important
naval and intelligence gathering bases in Greece. Historically, the creditor country
that owned the public debt of a small debtor country enjoyed hegemony in all
affairs from economic to geopolitical. The idea that Greece could switch
patrons from West to East is premature, though not out of the question by the
end of the century when China could be the undisputed world leader.
e) Greece could re-establish
a modicum of national sovereignty by introducing a policy mix on the
non-aligned model of economic nationalism that was popular in a number of
countries from Indonesia and Egypt in the 1950s and 1960s. With modifications
to accommodate the realities of globalization, quasi-statism and a modicum of
economic nationalism with aspects of neo-liberalism has resurfaced in the BRICS
nations in the last two decades. This
too is an unlikely scenario because the apologists of austerity and
neo-liberalism would immediately baptize economic nationalism just another form
of “Communism” as they have in the past.
f) A policy mix
that takes into account the current integration model and obligations to
foreign creditors along with their demands for internal policy changes toward
more neo-liberal course, combined with massive crackdown on public and private
sector corruption to raise revenue, and combined with sharp cuts in the defense
sector that absorbs 2.1-2.5% of GDP is another scenario. This is highly
unlikely because every political party from far right to far left support
defense spending.
Greece has been
facing a technical bankruptcy and its public debt amounting to 175-180% of GDP
in 2015 may not be paid off until the last quarter of the century, assuming no
future obstacles. In 2015, Greece has a public debt that cannot possibly be
serviced at current GDP growth rates because its revenues are not sufficient to
meet internal needs and service the debt at the same time. Foreign borrowing
constantly to service the debt only makes the aggregate debt larger in
relationship to GDP that has shrunk by 25% under the austerity of the IMF and
EU from 2010 until 2015. Because Greece is not an exporting nation and its
economic activity is largely resting on consumer demand, and because it has a
very low percentage of its population working full time in relationship with
other EU countries, it cannot possibly service the public debt. The solution as
far as IMF and EU are concerned, take the money from the middle class and
workers, thus lowering their living standards even lower.
It is very
unfortunate that SYRIZA adopted a left-progressive rhetoric that appealed to a
disillusioned lower middle class but in fact it had nothing behind the
rhetoric. In this respect, SYRIZA is no different than PASOK elected in 1980
under Andreas Papandreou who promised a Socialist government but by the early
1990s had brought the party and the country in line with neo-liberalism. SYRIZA
talked a big game and enthralled progressive within the country, around Europe
and around the world. However, the absence of any real leverage in negotiation
was apparent very quickly when Athens yielded to everything that the IMF and
Germany demanded. After initial negotiations that essentially amounted to no
change on the part of the IMF and EU position regarding austerity and
neo-liberalism, SYRIZA bought itself a four-month grace period to come up with
a more permanent program, presumably another round of borrowing to service the
unserviceable debt and another round of measures that amount to income transfer
from the lower and middle classes to the creditors.
The Greek voters
elected a government led by the center-left SYRIZA that promised to end
austerity and renegotiate the public debt so that the country can end
neoliberal policies that strengthen a few thousand domestic and foreign
companies and individuals, lower unemployment, raise wages and social security,
raise GDP to pre-austerity levels around one-quarter of a trillion euro and
restore the middle class and workers who have been paying the costs of
austerity with an estimate one-third cut in their income levels. The German
government, media and financial circles have been arguing that Greece is
pressuring the EU, trying to get away not paying the debt, trying to change the
rules by which EU members are obligated to follow, and sending the wrong signal
to the markets and other debtor nations.
For its part, Athens
has argues that Germany has not paid an estimated 40 to 150 billion in war
crimes reparations it owes. Therefore, it has no moral authority to speak about
dead beats. It does not help of course that SYRIZA has a flamboyant finance
minister Yiannis Varoufakis, interested much more in presenting himself to the
world than presenting in the best possible light the program of the country he
represents. This unfortunate choice for finance minister aside, the problem is
the direction SYRIZA wishes to take and not the celebrity-crazed individual who
seems to enjoy self-promotion. In that same spot Greece could have had Nelson
Mandela and Albert Einstein together and it would not have made any difference
to the IMF and Germany that do not want changes in austerity measures or
neoliberal policies.
It does not help
that Greece has a serious problem with public sector and private sector
corruption. One-third of the economy continues to operate under what the World
Bank classifies as “black market or subterranean” economy. When the few
thousand families that own 80% of the country’s wealth have taken most of their
money out of the country, and refuse to pay taxes on their business operations
how could any government carry on its duties? Systemic corruption under a
system of “baksheesh capitalism” is not going to change any time soon no matter
what policy direction SYRIZA or any other regime adopts, and not when there is
no effort by the IMF and EU to help Greece fight public and private sector
corruption. Fighting corruption is impossible because the largest European and
Greek financial interests are involved, everyone from Siemens corporation to
Greek shipping tycoons transporting narcotics and illegal crude oil and
cigarettes.
Failure on the part
of the EU and IMF to help previous governments pursue tax evaders who are
primarily the top ten percent of the people owning 80% of the wealth has been a
shortcoming, as much as failure to collect back taxes from foreign
corporations. Another major failure is the insistence that Greece continue
defense buying from Germany and France, despite the sharp drop in GDP. This is
reminiscent of what the US was doing in the 1950s when Greece was one of the
world’s poorest nations but its defense spending was the world’s second highest
behind South Vietnam. Finally, the IMF and EU promised the moon in 2010 when
they introduced austerity and neoliberal policies, but have delivered an
unmitigated disaster by their own standards, let alone those of austerity
critics.
What are the options for Greece and what
are its prospects?
OPTION One: Stay
the course: austerity and neo-liberalism
One option is to
remain in the euro and maintain its quasi-colonial status as it has not just
under austerity but since 1832 when the country declared independence and under
Anglo-French stewardship provided a Bavarian King Otto to rule over it on
behalf of the patron countries that had extended loans to achieve Greek
independence. Staying the course without any substantial deviation from austerity
and neoliberal policies would be a triumph for Germany and Western finance
capital.
The same prospect would be a resounding political defeat for all EU
periphery members, sending a strong message to them that Germany is the
undisputed patron of the EU operating no different than a colonial master in
the 19th century when public debt was used as leverage for foreign
financial, economic, trade, political and military control. Finally, staying
the course after promising voters the end of austerity and neoliberal policies
would be a major blow to democracy and it will result in polarized political
climate. The majority of citizens back the SYRIZA regime at this point, but a
few months from now they will want to see results that are tangible in their
lives, like lower real estate taxes, higher income, jobs prospects for their
unemployed children, etc.
Option Two: Re-establish
monetary sovereignty
Another option is
for the country to leave the euro zone and take its chances on its own.
Establishing monetary sovereignty would go a long way to having a better handle
on internal policies that governments had essentially handed over to the IMF
and EU. Exiting the euro is prospect that would result in a great deal of
misery for the vast majority of the people in the short-to-intermediate term,
and something that would send the euro and European stock markets tumbling.
Greece is still going to be a part of Europe, Western European companies will
still trade with it, which means that European would have no choice but to
provide it with liquidity largely because the Greek economy is so integrated
with the EU, and the world economy. For example, all auto companies, all
electronics companies, all communications companies, all transportation
companies, including China’s COSCO shipping, among many others, will pressure
their governments to come up with liquidity agreements via Greek banks and
Greece’s central bank so these companies conduct business and retain market
share.
As for Greek businesspeople, they have already taken out between 500 and
900 billion euro, so they could easily bring some of it back as needed in order
to conduct their domestic business. Liquidity from abroad will be slow and
sluggish until some stability emerges, but it will be there especially once a new
deal is struck on a debt repayment schedule. This is one scenario that would
not mean Greece would become an equal to Germany and France because of national
monetary sovereignty. After all, Greece was an economic, political and military
dependency when it had its own currency and it will be so again. The question
here is not whether it will be or not a dependent or semi-colonial country for
that is a given The issue is to lessen the degree of foreign control and misery
index at home by establishing financial sovereignty.
Option Three:
Policy mix with focus on defense budget cuts.
The last option has to do with one of the most
wasteful sectors in the economy and one where 10% to 50% of expenses are
devoted to bribes not just for government officials, politicians voting in
Parliament and others linked to purchases of everything from machine guns to
German subs, but even journalists and academics to mold public opinion about
the importance of having even more weapons that will never be used. The easy
answer for having a defense sector is that Turkey is very strong militarily and
it threatens both Greece and Cyprus. Even if Greece were to double defense
spending, from 2.5 percent of GDP to five percent, it would still not match
Turkey that can easily defeat Greece in a few weeks. Deterrence against Turkey is simply
non-existent. The second argument for defense is that Greece is a NATO member
and under collective defense agreements must maintain its current levels. This
is actually what prevents the country from making any move, because if it
downsizes its defense sector to border patrol, coast guard and domestic
security, the US and EU could permit Turkey to have its way in Cyprus and even
take a few of the Aegean islands on the eastern-most areas.
Greek defense
spending has been one of the highest in the world in per capita terms even in
the 1950s when it ranked among the poorest in the world. In per capita terms,
Greek defense spending ranked no 7 in the world in 2009, spending $1,230, while
France and England spend in the mid-$950s, despite their lofty place among the
G-7 richest nations in the world. Even during the austerity years from 2010
until the present, the defense budget continues to absorb 2.5% (2.1% by some
estimate) of GDP in real terms, an amount that translates to $5 billion in a
country that has been in technical bankruptcy and borrows from IMF and EU to
service its public debt.
It is interesting
that every single political party from the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn to the ruling
center-left SYRIZA, to the Communist Party agree that defense cannot be
touched. In the five years during austerity, no one political party ever
uttered a word about slashing defense, though they spoke a great deal of the
monumental corruption associated with the defense ministry weapons’
procurements. Why is it that no political party has suggested slashing defense
to cover very basic needs, and save several billion dollars needed for other
expenditures?
One reason is that
all of them are nationalistic and believe without what they see as strong
defense Turkey would take back the Balkan province it lost in the 1820s.
Another explanation is that all political parties know there is no popular
support for cutting defense. A third explanation is that all of them are taking
money indirectly from defense contractors and governments that want Greece to
maintain strong defense. Other explanations include the possibility that
cutting defense would only result in higher unemployment in a country with 26%
official unemployment. Another reason is that Cyprus among other countries
including Israel wants Greece to have a strong defense. No matter what the
reason, no political party is addressing the defense issue although here is a
sector that could be discussed as part of a broader policy mix to save money
amid a crisis. Above all, the US has been pressuring all NATO members including
Greece to increase not decrease defense spending because Russia is the new old
enemy, at least for now, until further notice.
What option does
SYRIZA have amid such dilemma?
The ruling party knows that Germans want Greece
to keep buying obsolete weapons that will never be used, just like submarines
costing billions but in constant need of repairs even before leaving port. The
US needs Greece for its own military purposes and it is not about to permit
defense cuts. SYRIZA Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras appointed the independent
conservative-nationalist (Independent Greek party) Panos Kamenos to the defense
ministry, sending a message that this area of government will not make deep
cuts in defense.
Considering that
the eclectic leftist rhetoric clashed with the realities of austerity and
neo-liberal policies the new government will be following, there is no doubt
that SYRIZA has made its choice to accept the German-imposed patron-client
integration model under policies that the conservative New Democracy party and
PASOK have been following in the first half of this decade. The result will be
continued downward socioeconomic mobility and more college-educated people
leaving the country. However, this is the history of modern Greece, with the
exception of an expansionary cycle coming from 1980 until 2005 when billions
borrowed were not invested in the economy but went for consumption instead of
production.
There is always the
unexpected in politics, the big surprise that may come as a result of a public
referendum on accepting or rejecting the IMF-EU terms, staying or leaving the
euro. The unexpected could come as a result of a regional war breaking out and
changing conditions for Europe, or perhaps more EU members joining the
anti-austerity choir and confronting Germany’s patron-client model. I do not
regard these as realistic, and believe that even symbolically SYRIZA sent a
strong message to the EU elites that fear democracy because they realize it
entails catering to the interests of the people.
Although this
government should have looked at all possible models of economic planning and
development from non-aligned countries and from the BRICS, it should have
looked closer at the problem associated with trying to assert partial national
sovereignty, and it should have tried to be a lot more honest with the voters
that still support it by at least 60 percent according to opinion polls, the
question is whether it has learned anything at all from its brief experience in
the last five weeks. The easy route is simply to yield to co-optation by
domestic and international financial, political and military elites and take
its chances fooling the voters in the next election. After all, this is exactly
what previous governments did as well. What lessons are there for Spain’s
PODEMOS and other progressive political parties in Europe? Do not over promise
and under deliver, study all possible options before going to the negotiating
table, have several back up plans and always inform the voters honestly about
the limited leverage of a debtor nation when negotiating with powers that have
enormous leverage as creditors.
2 comments:
Why have you not mentioned the option of dismissing the EU and IMF central bankers, was it Bulgaria, who has shown the way?
I am not aware of any EU member (Bulgaria is not a full member of the EU) paying off public debt in its entirety. Hungary has challenged the authority of the IMF and EU austerity and neo-liberalism. Hungary has a much healthier and diversified economy than Greece and its public debt amounts to 80% of GDP, not 176% which is the case of Greece.
I am aware that the Wall Street Journal among others have suggested that Greece could indeed pay off its debt currently at $365 billion, but that is an outrageous scenario and will never happen because of what it entails in terms of asset sales. Paying off entire debt is not an option, at least not for an economy of 175 billion euro GDP and public debt twice that size.
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