Greece — Syriza –
Subservience to Neoliberalism – The Killing
Plague that Knows No Mercy?
Greece’s debt today stands at 175 % of her
economic output. The best – and only decent
and socially as well as economically viable
option – is exiting the Eurozone by her own
decision.
By Peter Koenig
February 23, 2015 "ICH"
- To begin with, let’s be clear,
neoliberalism is a criminal,
murderous plague that knows no mercy.
Neoliberalism is the root of (almost) all
evil of the 21st Century.
Neoliberalism is the cause for most current
wars, conflicts and civil strife around the
globe.
Neoliberalism is the expression
of abject greed for accumulation of
resources by a few, for which tens of
millions of people have to die.
Neoliberalism and its
feudal banking system, led by Wall Street
and its intricate network of international
finance, steals public infrastructure,
public safety nets – public investments paid
for by nations’ citizens – robs nations of
their resources (labor, physical resources
above-and underground) – by avid schemes of
privatization, justified under the pretext
of ‘structural reforms’ to ‘salvage’ poor
but often resources-rich countries from
bankruptcy.
Rescue
by structural reform or adjustment is
synonymous with deceit. Even IMF chief,
Christine Lagarde, admitted that the model
failed in Greece, thereby admitting that the
notion of ‘austerity’ for the poor as a
means for economic recovery is not working.
– No news to most of us.
The neoliberal concept is
no innovation of today. It was born in the
1930s in Europe as a response (sic) to the
US depression of the 1930s. It was initially
thought of as a moderate form of giving the
private sector more liberty for initiatives
and investments, while limiting government
control.
The concept was revamped
after WWII in Washington rightwing think
tanks (sic), such as the American Enterprise
Institute, the Heritage Foundation,
Political Economy Research Centre and the
like. In the UK developing hard-core
neoliberalism was mostly in the domain of
the Institute of Economic Affairs.
Prominent, mostly Zionist ‘scholars’
elaborated the idea through the sixties and
seventies into a market fundamentalism which
was launched in the 1980s in the United
States under President Reagan and in Europe
under UK’s Prime Minister Thatcher. The
concept culminated in the so-called
Washington Consensus in 1989, depicting a
series of ‘everything-goes’ market
reform policies, to be adopted by the
Washington based financial institutions,
World Bank, IDB, IMF, FED, US Treasury.
Since then, neoliberalism
has engulfed the world like brushfire. It
knows no boundaries. It is influencing world
economies like no other economic concept did
before. If not by physical weapons and
bloodletting wars, neoliberalism is also
devastating lives, causing misery,
destroying entire nations, by its financial
instruments, chiefly represented by the
Bretton Woods institutions, World Bank and
International Monetary Fund – and lately
also the European Central Bank (ECB), the
economic sledgehammer of the European
Union’s 19 Eurozone countries. The IMF, ECB
and the European Commission (EC) have become
known as the infamous ‘troika’, the cause
for economic strangulation of the southern
European nations – Greece, Portugal, Spain,
Ireland – and even Italy.
Case in point is Greece.
Last Friday, 20 February, Greece’s newly
elected Prime Minister, Alexis Tsipras, and
his Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis, of
Syriza, the alliance of so-called left-wing
parties, went through a marathon session of
attempted negotiations with Brussels over
her € 240 billion plus debt, due at the end
of February 2015. They asked for a 6-month
extension without any strings attached,
meaning – no more socially debilitating
austerity programs. Perhaps they were
dreaming, or simply not listening to the
utter arrogant advance warnings of Brussels’
elitist neoliberal talking heads, especially
Germany’s financial hawk, Minister of
Finance, Wolfgang Schäuble, and the
ultra-neoliberal chairman of the group of
the 19 Eurozone finance chiefs, Jeroen
Dijsselbloem.
The latter said that
Athens had given its “unequivocal commitment
to honour their financial obligations” to
creditors, and he will hold her to the
promise. This commitment refers to
Mr.Tsipras’ predecessor’s, Mr. Alekos
Alavanos, Letter of Agreement signed with
the EU.
The result was predictable. Tsipras who
campaigned under the radical but noblestand
of ‘no concessions’ to the lords of
Brussels, and his Finance Minister, caved in
miserably. They did not get a six months
extension, but only 4 months – under the
condition that Greece submits a
comprehensive list of reforms and reform
mechanisms by Monday night, 23 February;
basically the same list of austerity
measures agreed upon by Tsipras’
predecessor. Implementation of the reforms
would be supervised by the troika. At the
outset, Tsipras-Varoufakis meekly accepted
the EU conditions.
As James Petras puts it in “The
Assassination of Greece” –
“Every major financial institution – the
European Central Bank, the European
Commission and the IMF – toes the line: no
dissent or deviation is allowed. Greece must
accept EU dictates or face major financial
reprisals. “Economic strangulation or
perpetual debt peonage” is the lesson which
Brussels tends to all member states of the
EU. While ostensibly speaking to Greece – it
is a message directed to all states,
opposition movements and trade unions who
call into question the dictates of the
Brussels oligarchy and its Berlin
overlords.”
During Friday, 20 February, while the
financial marathon rambled on in Brussels,
one billion euros were withdrawn from Geek
banks, in anticipation of failed
negotiations and possible expulsion of
Greece from the Eurozone – the so-called
Grexit.
It is unclear how Tsipras-Varoufakis are
going to explain the hapless result brought
back from Brussels to their electorate. It
must remind those who can still remember how
Andreas Papandreou, member of the
Pan-Hellenic Socialist Party, elected as
first PM after Greece was admitted in 1980
to the EU, betrayed his constituency. He
promised them that Greece would exit NATO
and the European Economic Community, that
Greece would develop her own economy with
economic growth at her pace. Soon after
election he reneged on both promises. – Will
the Greek people buy the Tsipras-Varoufakis
‘explanations’ for not honoring Syriza’s
pre-election commitments?
Greece has various options.
Tsipras-Varoufakis must know them. Perhaps
they keep them hidden away until “the last
ditch” moment. To begin with, they could
have imposed and still can impose strict
capital transfer controls, to avoid the
outflow of precious capital from Greek
oligarchs, capital that eventually is
missing for rebuilding Greece’s economy and
would need to be replaced by new debt.
Although, this is basically against EU’s
rule of free transfer of capital, Greece as
a sovereign country, can roll back its EU
vassal status, take back its sovereignty and
do what every reasonable central bank would
do in Greece’s situation – impose capital
transfer restrictions. After all, the Euro
is also – and still is – Greece’s currency.
The EU might not like it –
nor would the Greek oligarchs – but it would
be a bold step in the right direction. And
should it result in Jeroen Dijsselbloem’s
and Germany’s Wolfgang Schäuble’s boisterous
threats of ‘sanctions’ – then so be it.– Why
not call their bluff? – Submitting a letter
on Monday that says just that – we are
happy to accept your extension of 4 months,
but are morally, socially and economically
unable to meet your conditions of austerity.
Period.
The EU has no interest
whatsoever in a Greek exit.In fact, they are
afraid of a Grexit, not only
because of a potential default on the Greek
debt, but it could open a floodgate for
other southern European countries in
distress to follow the Greek example. That
would be the end of the Euro as we know it.
It might be the final blow to the
dollar-euro house of cards, house of casino
money.
Tsipras–Varoufakis should
stick to their promise – no more austerity
programs. No more privatizations of public
property, no more cuts in pensions and
salaries; to the contrary, rolling back the
cuts already administered, bringing back
decent life conditions to the Greek people,
gradually averting the illegal troika
imposed misery.
Greece’s debt today stands
at 175 % of her economic output. The best –
and only decent and socially as well as
economically viable option – is exiting the
Eurozone by her own decision. Greece would
be declared bankrupt. The Anglo-Saxon rating
agencies would be quick in down-grading
Greece financially to ‘junk’. The financial
markets would shun her. No more money, but
utmost pressure to repay what they can.
Greece would be in the enviable position of
negotiating debt repayment at HER
own terms – à la Argentina in 2001.
No country can be left to
starve, especially when the debt was
contracted illegally or under coercion.
International law allows renegotiation of
such contracts – contracts signed under
pressure or by corrupt governments.
Finally – or perhaps
refreshingly – Greece could look east, to
the Russia-China alliance. Their assistance
under much more reasonable conditions is
virtually assured. – Why insisting on
following a defunct predatory system, when
there are new promising development
potentials looming on the horizon?
Peter Koenig is an economist
and geopolitical analyst. He is also a
former World Bank staff and worked
extensively around the world in the fields
of environment and water resources. He is
the author of Implosion – An Economic
Thriller about War, Environmental
Destruction and Corporate Greed – fiction
based on facts and on 30 years of World Bank
experience around the globe.