Written by Yanis
Varoufakis
Any sensible person
can see how a certain video [1] has become part of something beyond a gesture.
It has sparked off a kerfuffle reflecting the manner in which the 2008 banking
crisis began to undermine Europe’s badly designed monetary union, turning proud
nations against each other.
I opposed the 2010 and
2012 ‘bailout’ loans from German and other European taxpayers because:
- the new loans
represented not a bailout for Greece but a cynical transfer of losses from the
books of the private banks to the weak shoulders of the weakest of Greek
citizens. (How many of Europe’s taxpayers, who footed these loans, know that
more than 90% of the €240 billion borrowed by Greece went to financial
institutions, not to the Greek state or its citizens?)
- it was obvious that,
at a time Greece could not repay its existing loans, the austerity conditions
for giving Greece the new loans would crush Greek nominal incomes, making our
debt even less sustainable
- the ‘bailout’ burden
would, sooner or later, weigh down German and other European taxpayers once the
weaker Greeks buckled under their mountainous debts (as moneyed Greeks had
already shifted their deposits to Frankfurt, London etc.)
- Misleading peoples
and Parliaments by presenting a bank bailout as an act of ‘solidarity to
Greece’ would turn Germans against Greeks, Greeks against Germans and,
eventually, Europe against itself.
In 2010 Greece owed
not one euro to German taxpayers. We had no right to borrow from them, or from
other European taxpayers, while our public debt was unsustainable. Period!
That was my
‘controversial’ point in 2010: In 2010, Greece should have borrowed not one
euro before entering into debt restructuring procedures and partially
defaulting to its private sector creditors.
Well before the May
2010 ‘bailout’, I urged European citizens to tell their governments not to even
think of transferring private losses to them.
To no avail, of
course. That transfer was effected soon after [2] with the largest
taxpayer-backed loan in economic history given to the Greek state on austerity
conditions that have caused Greeks to lose a quarter of their income, making it
impossible to repay private and public debts, and causing a hideous
humanitarian crisis.
That was then, in
2010. What should we do now, in 2015, that Greece remains in crisis and our
people, the Greeks and the Germans, have, regrettably but also predictably, descended
into a mutual ‘blame game’?
First, we should work
towards ending the toxic ‘blame game’ and the moralising finger-pointing which
benefit only the enemies of Europe.
Secondly, we need to
focus on our joint interest: On how to grow and to reform Greece rapidly, so
that the Greek state can best repay debts it should never have taken on while
looking after its citizens as a modern European state ought to do.
In practical terms,
the 20th February Eurogroup agreement offers an excellent opportunity to move
forward. Let us implement it immediately, as our leaders have urged in
yesterday’s informal Brussels meeting.
Looking ahead, and
beyond current tensions, our joint task is to re-design Europe so that Germans
and Greeks, along with all Europeans, can re-imagine our monetary union as a
realm of shared prosperity.
[1] Whose showing
derailed an otherwise constructive discussion on German television?
[2] First in May 2010
(€110 billion) and then again in the spring of 2012 (another €130 billion).
(Πηγή: yanisvaroufakis.eu)
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