BabelHuber wrote:Varoufakis badmouthed the finances of his own country from the beginning, this is correct.
But this is also one the most retarded things a finance minister can do at all! Doing so scares away investors and hence compounded Greeks' problems.
Perhaps Varoufakis even was so stupid he didn't even recognize this, maybe he thought as finance minister he can continue speaking like a university professor.
The Syriza government has been in power for, what, five or six months?
During that time, by
far the most important job the Syriza government's finance minister has... would be handling the debt issue! Not attracting investment- because investment won't fix the Greek economy if further debt restructuring doesn't happen.
Pretending that Greece is in a realistic position to repay its debts,
when that is not true, would be grossly irresponsible. Do you seriously think that Varoufakis was supposed to
lie, or pretend that his country would be able to pay back money without debt restructuring, when he knew that was not true, and when his main job was to secure that debt restructuring?
The fact that you don't see this is another proof of your simple-mindness.
You're calling people stupid for not thinking that their finance minister should publicly speak what is, based on mathematical facts, the truth about his own country's finances.
Lying about your nation's financial situation to make it look like you're not heavily in debt didn't work very well for the French monarchy with Necker, and it works even worse today.
Crown wrote:I understand that the 3rd largest Greek political party are Neo-Nazis.
Give us your money, or we will vote for Neo-Nazis!
You trivialize this, because the awkward truth is that the pro-Greek side on this thread isn't even asking for more money- he's actively opposed to more bailouts because more loans will not fix a problem caused by too many loans!
He's not even arguing that Greece needs foreign money to have long-term viability. He's arguing that Greece needs the
interest payments to go away, because said interest payments are collapsing their economy no matter what else the Greeks do or don't do.
If you can't be bothered to comprehend what other people are saying, why even bother? You're like a chatbot of bad economics.
Greece could have done much more during the last 5 years, e.g. taking the offers from Germany and France to modernize their bureaucracy, at least trying to collect taxes etc. But they did not.
And still Greece was growing in 2014 and had a primary surplus. Achievements which were instantly reversed by Syriza.
Syriza set Greece on fire, not the EU!
Greece was already on fire. The economy was miserable, the people were unemployed, and the country was committed to spending an increasing amount of money on debts it realistically could not repay.
Syriza appears to have judged that further cuts to the mass of pension payments to the unemployed were NOT going to allow Greece to pay back its debts (if only because starving homeless people rioting in the streets tend to overthrow governments). So it decided to attack the root of the problem directly- the debt.
However, dealing with the efforts of the Eurogroup to extend more loans to Greece and dangle the prospect of debt forgiveness as a remote bait... takes up time. Syriza is in a poor position to reform its domestic economy while concentrating its efforts on solving the root cause of the
current crisis- the overburden of foreign debt smothering the economy.
Crown wrote:And yet,
YOU blame the one person who is honest about this. Exactly fulfilling my accusation.
Yes, if 'honesty' means setting your house on fire and then stating that it burns.
Also I find it funny that you seemingly believe honesty is a virtue for a finance minister whose country is in deep trouble. And then you claim to understand politics
A finance minister who is caught lying loses his credibility, at which point everything he says is ignored. Any Greek finance minister who saw his job as "assert the economy is doing well" would be a laughingstock, the economic equivalent of
Baghdad Bob
Greece has had enough liars in high office. Liars in high office are a big part of how they got into this mess, because they had a string of corrupt governments who claimed everything was fine while they were running up this huge debt.
Honesty may not always get the results you desire, but it beats being known as a worthless lying fool.
Syriza fucking claimed that they don't feel bound to the bailout contracts because they were signed by the predecessor government!
Of course the answer of the EU was "no, these contracts are still valid". I don't know what morons like you are thinking, but this is exactly the answer any sane person would expect!
And this was exactly Syriza's mistake - you do not enter negotiations this way. You do not insult your partners, you do not say that you don't intend to keep valid contracts - except if you are an idiot beyond help.
Any sane politician would have went to the negotiations saying something like "the old bailout contracts have negative side-effects to our society, we fear that extremist elements could be profiting from this. Also, the targetetd primary surplus is too high in our opinion, we cannot stomach this".
At which point the European creditors could say, just as they did say anyway, "obey the contracts or else." Various political figures in the creditor nations were saying this as soon as Syriza took power
anyway, so that wouldn't change much.
As I mentioned earlier, unless we assume that the creditors are idiots, the only way their actions over the past few years make sense is if the real plan is to strip Greek assets while milking them for as many interest payments as possible before they inevitably default. That decision almost has to have been settled on before Syriza took power.
So Syriza had very little to lose by declaring, point-blank, that the existing system was a disaster for Greece and that they were prepared to repudiate it. Their only real hope, frankly, was that the bad situation in Greece would draw them enough international sympathy that the creditor governments would get popular pressure from the left saying "apply some debt forgiveness."
That didn't happen, at least not to the degree Syriza needed, so the strategy failed. But NO other strategy would have had meaningful success, given that realistically at this point, the creditor-nations' bargaining position is dominated by this hardline "squeeze out every last Euro
right now" mindset.
When you're dealing with a predatory lender who has every intention of stripping your assets, there's not much point in pretending that said predator is negotiating with you in good faith.