It's the pro-Greek side using 'lazy' as a shorthand for a diverse array of criticisms that all summarize as "the reason the Greeks have problems is because they have this vice or that vice, and so the way to solve the problem is to treat them like they're children and spank* them until they behave better!"salm wrote:So who are the people shorthanding all that stuff to lazy? As mentioned above I rarely see anybody do this besides either Greeks cited in newspapers or Greece friendly articles by non Greeks.
There are probably at least a dozen versions of that argument, but they all reduce to "Greece suffers because of a lack of Greek virtue, and it is the role of the 'adult' European powers to take up the white man's burden help Greece acquire the virtues it needs." All these arguments are then used, in varying forms, to justify putting into motion a series of policies that avoid doing the things Greece needs, in favor of doing things that will benefit foreign creditors.
It is very much like the approach taken by the Republican Party in the US: private sector good, virtuous people always get rich, you're poor because you lack virtues, so we should not only not help you, we shouldn't even refrain from hurting you, because you lack virtue, you terrible person, you.
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*[And if, by any chance, you don't believe in spanking as a means of remedying child behavioral problems... consider why spanking a country is a better idea]
Well, what's your perceived problem with the pension system? Once we know that, the challenge is simply to make your objections fact-based, rather than using the sort of idiot moralizing about "welfare queens" the Republican Party in the US uses when it wants to get rid of a chunk of the American welfare system.I agree that it would be counter productive to call people lazy because lazy implies a negative character trait (imo it´s good trait but that´s besides the point). So how would one critisize the pension system for example without some Greeks feeling personally insulted?
As the Greek debt grows larger, it will become impossible for a fund which invests in the Greek economy and tracks its growth to grow fast enough to outrun the size of the debt. In which case a larger and larger share of the profits will end up "serving the debt of greece," which is to say "serving the creditors of Greece," at which point the creditors are doing rather well out of their control over the fund, since it's a steady little money-maker that pays them several billion euros a year more or less in perpetuity...Thanas wrote:If "all the profits will either serve the debt of Greece or be invested into the Greek econmy as stimuli" is "give me all your shit", then you must be a very small mind indeed.Crown wrote:So why not be upfront and be honest with 'give me all your shit' rather than 'deposit all your shit in tax haven Luxembourg under a shell organisation which I totally own'? Do one prat.Thanas wrote:The KFW is the official state development bank of Germany. Of course the German Finance Minister is the chairman of this wholly state-owned bank. Look up the British Business Bank for a comparison, you idiot.
Unless the Greeks somehow pay down the debt. And we're seeing multiple people, including the IMF apparently, all of whom say that paying down the debt is impossible without debt restructuring.
This passage here is not meant to address the question of whether the restructuring will ever happen. I will address that later. The point here is simply and solely that unless the Greek debt is made payable (or was secretly payable all along no matter what the IMF thought), a predictable thing will happen. Any set of Greek assets controlled by foreigners and used to service the Greek debt will become a mechanism by which said foreigners can harvest a revenue stream of up to several billion euros a year from the Greek economy.
When a set of democratically elected governments come up to a single government which they have a major advantage over, and coerce the single government into ignoring last week's referendum and agreeing to many of the same things it expressly didn't want...And these European voters can make their votes count in elections. Screaming how an offer made by democratically elected governments to another democratically elected government is a coup does not make you look rational, it just makes you look like a child who whines and screams because they didn't get their way.Well a majority would happen to be European voters; do you live inside your bubble?
"Coup" is not the right word, perhaps. But we really don't have a word for "small government is forced to capitulate to a series of humiliating terms that turn it into a de facto puppet of foreign interests that no longer carries out the will of its electorate."
Such a word would be useful; "coup" is being used as a rather crude substitute.
I am attempting to explain why pro-Greeks summarize arguments like "Greeks shirk their responsibilities like paying taxes, and Greeks expect to retire at fifty, and Greeks don't work hard enough, and Greeks are reckless about debt, and so on..." with the much shorter, more compact "Greeks are lazy."Bullshit, Simon. You take valid criticisms like "Greeks shirk their responsibilities like paying taxes" - which nobody has ever disputed - and then try to twist them into some un-PC-expression. That is not the level of discourse around here and you should know better. Have some intellectual honesty.Simon_Jester wrote:"Greeks are lazy" is a convenient shorthand for "Greeks expect excessive entitlements from their welfare responsibilities," "Greeks shirk their responsibilities like paying taxes," "Greeks are lax in honoring obligations like enacting meaningful anti-corruption laws," and so on. All of which ARE things the Greeks are commonly criticized for, including in this thread.
So 'lazy' becomes a shorthand for all the various ways in which the Greeks are accused of bad practices, with the (frequent) implication that the problem is a lack of some virtue on the part of the Greeks.
Personally, my only objection to the "Greeks are lazy" category of argument is that even if they are true, even if the Greeks really are a nation of filthy shirkers... the current set of policies won't serve any purpose. Except to ultimately strip Greece of what assets it still possesses despite, apparently, having been a nation of inferior lazy shirkers since at the latest the time of the Byzantines.
That depends heavily on the precise wording of the agreement. I will confess that I've been relying on third party summaries of the agreement.Bullshit. It will be slowed down until the obstacles are fixed. You can't just retract something that has already gone through.Simon_Jester wrote:And when- not if, when- the Greeks run into obstacles of any kind in "honoring" the agreement on schedule, the debt restructuring will instantly be retractedBTW, there is the prospect for a restructure of the debt at the later date, if the creditors can see, that the Greeks honour the agreement this time.
Suffice to say that the world already has a LOT of experience with the kind of treaties that nations like Britain, France, and Germany sign with heavily indebted nations they're planning to use as a cash cow. We spent much of the 19th and 20th centuries in a world where that was one of the many tools in the imperialist arsenal. And it is quite common for such a treaty to "appear" to leave the indebted nation with a way out, while in fact making it nearly impossible for them to escape the debt trap without the permission of a foreign master.
So do you propose to throw Greece itself into debtor's prison, for the crime of "being a den of scum and villainy?"Why would anybody want to plunder Greece? Tell me that. To what end? And how is this worth the damage to the European product?Because, assuming the European creditors aren't morons, the only rational explanation left is that this is all an elaborate structure intended to provide a legal cover for stripping Greek assets. The European creditor nations have every reason to plunder Greece rather than forgiving its debts, even if that would be vastly worse for Greece.
Much of that half trillion Euros was thrown into Greece by private banks- that decision was on par with a lot of bad lending that took place up to 2008. I can't say what Goldman Sachs and so on were thinking back in 2005. They were probably not explicitly planning to plunder Greece, but they were planning to do a series of things that eventually crashed the world economy, so I have no approval for them.I mean, are you so delusional to think that Greece, with their 2% of the Eurozone economy, is a worthwhile target to plunder? Do you really think that this is worth spending all the time and effort and to throw over half a trillion of Euros into it? If that is supposed to be plunder, then I am getting a very bad return.
What then happened is that European governments took on this pile of bad debt, and had to decide from the start what to do with it...
The problem is, the debt was never payable, unless not only aerius but also, apparently, the IMF was mistaken.
What do you do with an unrepayable debt, owed by a nation whose economy is collapsing? You have three choices:
1) Forgive the debt. In which case, if you wound up owning this debt through the bailout of a bunch of private banks, you get nothing to repay all that taxpayer money you just gave to your too-big-to-fail banks. So if you want to recover the money you want to try...
2) Hold the debt indefinitely and profit from the stream of interest, at least until the debtor nation collapses from economic exhaustion. Greece is already at the edge of exhaustion so this strategy isn't going to work, which leaves...
3) Seize control of whatever capital assets and property you can within the debtor nation, to at least partially recover the debt. In other words, plunder the debtor nation (e.g. the French occupation of the Ruhr).
The loans were not originally made with the intent of plundering Greece, but at this point in time there is nothing the lenders can do BUT plunder Greece if they want their money back. Therefore, I am unsurprised to see any behavior on the part of the lenders, that would make it easier for them to plunder Greece.
Would you mind linking to the post where you previously mentioned this? Or to the source where you heard about it? I'll even take a German language source; I can pick my way through some bits of written German and rely on translation software when I can't.It is not. FFS, it is almost like nobody ever reads the issues. Nobody who is whining about unsustainable debt has presumably read about the fact that the whole debt would be restructured under the QE program, thus turning it effectively into giant subsidies with any interest payyments being returned to Greece (and the creditors thus losing yearly money due to inflation).Thing is, aerius isn't asking you to cry. He's asking you to do basic arithmetic and recognize that the Greek economy cannot support interest payments of seven or eight billion euros a year without crippling consequences... and that this is the level of interest payment they're being expected to make just to stay afloat, let alone to ever repay the debt and escape it.
Right- but bobalot's criticism is that the economic zone in its present state is a failure. You can argue that this failure was inevitable due to France and Ireland rejecting a political union... but it's still a failure.Thanas wrote:Guess what? The Eurozone is not a single country. If it were a political union with every vote being counted equally, with common rules, a common Government and a common parliament with true legislative powers then it would have transfers as well. But the political union was explicitly rejected by the voters of Ireland and France (despite Germany being for it). You can't compare the EU with another country if it is not a country, just a collection of states.bobalot wrote:What the EuroTards don't realise is that in countries like Australia, America and Canada people don't give a shit that there are constant fiscal transfers to the weaker states like Mississippi without any promises of repayment. For the most part, we love our countries and think nothing of it. The idea of completely humiliating and impoverishing a member state for years or decades on end is completely repellent and would never be seriously considered. For this reason, the Euro and the EU's response to Greece is a complete inditement on what a failure the whole economic zone is.
And it's a failure that many of the weaker states will want to bail out of, given that the EU project in its present state is being used as a vehicle to degrade, humiliate, and impoverish one of its weakest states. Granted this might not be happening if political union were feasible. Granted that Greece should probably never have been let into the Eurozone and the EU in the first place. But if wishes were horses, beggars would ride. It's irrelevant whether things should have gone differently- they didn't, the EU is what it is, and the way Greece is being treated is a powerful message to countries like Italy, Portugal, and Spain about how they will be treated if they become similarly vulnerable.
He didn't say "the interest on Greek debt is 4% of GDP." He said "the interest rate on Greek debt is 4%." Are you sure you're correcting him on the right fact?You can't lose what you never had in the first place.Crown wrote:The fuck? Germany is the pack leader, and worse it's a country that 'claims' to know what it is doing and yet has repeatedly, consistently insists on goals that cannot be met and when they aren't they old 'they didn't try hard enough meme' gets trotted out.
Let me help you;
DO YOU SEE A PROBLEM? You don't need a fucking degree to understand how it is IMPOSSIBLE for Greece to pay that back, and the solution? Give them €84bn more debt!Code: Select all
Greek Economy Greek Debt €237bn €310bn GDP Growth Interest on Debt 0.2% 4%
WHAT. THE. FUCK!
I'm losing my fucking mind, this is what it feels like to lose one's mind.
The interest on Greek debt is not 4% of GDP either. It is 2.1% as has been pointed out before and will be even less in the future.
If the half trillion Euros are a loan, then they are simply the mechanism by which creditors hope to eventually get back up to half a trillion Euros from Greece. More than that if they're lucky, less if (as is probably the case) the Greek economy collapses from exhaustion at trying to meet the demands of its creditors.Subjugate that insignificant little nation? For what purpose? For what gain? Strategic Gyros purposes?Crown wrote:There was never any agenda other than complete and utter subjugation of Greece by the Europgroup irrespective of Tsipras or Varoufakis or SYRIZA's behaviour. To say otherwise is to basically admit that the current 'bailout' is more punitive than necessary just out of sheer spite.
Also, nice to know that subjugation translates into "half a trillion Euros".
A loan is not a gift and it's disingenuous to call it one.
Plus, of course, everything I discussed above, in particular:
"The loans were not originally made with the intent of plundering Greece, but at this point in time there is nothing the lenders can do BUT plunder Greece if they want their money back. Therefore, I am unsurprised to see any behavior on the part of the lenders, that would make it easier for them to plunder Greece."
Grumman wrote:But it is. When somebody is "lazy" (read: refuses to pay their taxes), we do throw them into a pit. We call it "prison", and we do it because refusing to pay your taxes is a crime. And in 2006, 40% of all Greek companies were committing this crime. Public servants were corrupt to the point of inventing entire fictional organisations to funnel money into their own pockets. If it is necessary to forgive Greece's debts, fine. But it should come after Greece has stopped being such a den of scum and villainy, not before.Simon_Jester wrote:"Greeks are lazy" is a convenient shorthand for "Greeks expect excessive entitlements from their welfare responsibilities," "Greeks shirk their responsibilities like paying taxes," "Greeks are lax in honoring obligations like enacting meaningful anti-corruption laws," and so on. All of which ARE things the Greeks are commonly criticized for, including in this thread.
So 'lazy' becomes a shorthand for all the various ways in which the Greeks are accused of bad practices, with the (frequent) implication that the problem is a lack of some virtue on the part of the Greeks.
Now, my main issue with calling the Greeks 'lazy' is that even if it is true, it doesn't solve anything. And if we start punishing countries for their citizens having vices like 'lazy,' and if the punishment is to have your assets stripped and be thrown into an economic pit...
That's not a world order decent people would want to live under, I think.
Because at that point, the actual actions you would have to take to do that boil down to "plunder Greece." Only of course the Greeks deserved plundering, because they are wicked and you are the scourge of austere Calvinist free-market God come to punish them for their wickedness.
This is exactly like listening to Republicans talk about welfare recipients.
Now, I'm not saying the Greeks don't need to reform. They obviously DO. The problem is that extending them more and more loans while seeking to gain control over their economic assets because they have failed to "reform" is like giving an alcoholic more and more liquor while seeking to walk off with the family silver because they have failed to "sober up." The only sensible explanation for such behavior is either schizophrenia or the intent to rob someone.
If the problem were really "the Greeks need to reform," and that was really what mattered, the solution would be to forgive the debts (or the vast majority thereof), then NOT loan any more money to Greece for any reason for a period of a decade or two, and see if they can stay afloat on their own merits.
Nothing can possibly force a Greek reform more effectively than forcing them to live alone with the consequences of their decisions.