2
0

New Greek government already making good on its anti-austerity promises


 invite response                
2015 Jan 29, 4:24am   37,135 views  101 comments

by darlag   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

As promised, the new Prime Minister, Alexis Tsipras and his SYRIZA government are rolling back fees, raising the minimum wage, re-hiring some of the public workers who were laid-off by the previous administration and officially announcing other changes and reforms to come.

At what can only be called lightening speed, many of the the so-called “reforms” put in place by the former Prime Minister, Antonis Samaras, imposed on Greece by the EU lenders, the Troika, are quickly being repealed or reversed as the new government coalition starts to make good on its election campaign promises to back away from “austerity”.

http://www.globaldeflationnews.com/new-greek-government-already-making-good-on-its-anti-austerity-promises/

Comments 1 - 40 of 101       Last »     Search these comments

1   Shaman   2015 Jan 29, 8:38am  

What do you expect from a democracy? Just don't lend them anymore money. I dot feel sorry for the hedge funds who may lose out on their money. The wealthy are already too rich. Let Greece balance its budget or go broke.

2   zzyzzx   2015 Jan 29, 8:47am  

I also have to wonder why anyone would lend any government any money, especially if it's a country like Greece.

3   Peter P   2015 Jan 29, 8:51am  

zzyzzx says

I also have to wonder why anyone would lend any government any money, especially if it's a country like Greece.

Collateralized with Feta cheese?

4   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Jan 29, 10:58am  

This guy is a complete fool. He is financed by other countries, doesn't have any leverage at all, but acts he's sitting on tons of pure gold.

He's going to get whacked pretty hard by reality.

I'd say Germany will tell him to go ahead and leave the euro - and soon.
When his banks start failing, we'll see if he's still so cocky.

5   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 11:01am  

This is great. The Euro primarily benefits Germany and hurts Southern Europe. Germany has made out like a bandit on the EU and Euro Currency.

"Certainly, Germany can present a bill for such services. After all, we're not Communists. But Merkel must let us draw the water from the well."

If Greece starts causing trouble, Spain and Italy will start causing trouble... then possibly France...

There's a whole lotta bad blood in the Eurozone over Austerity, Strong Euro Policies, etc.

6   socal2   2015 Jan 29, 11:02am  

zzyzzx says

I also have to wonder why anyone would lend any government any money, especially if it's a country like Greece.

Same thing with Muni Bonds in California.

As Stockton and Vallejo have shown - when these Cities go bankrupt, they will shaft the bond holders and keep their fat pensions untouched.

7   Strategist   2015 Jan 29, 11:19am  

thunderlips11 says

This is great. The Euro primarily benefits Germany and hurts Southern Europe. Germany has made out like a bandit on the EU and Euro Currency.

Thunder, you really think living beyond your means is advisable?

8   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 11:32am  

Strategist says

thunderlips11 says

This is great. The Euro primarily benefits Germany and hurts Southern Europe. Germany has made out like a bandit on the EU and Euro Currency.

Thunder, you really think living beyond your means is advisable?

The US doesn't do so? Not just the Public Gov't debt, but the Private Debt.

Before Americans complain about Greece, they oughta start with many aspects of our own system. Mote in eye and all that.

9   Shaman   2015 Jan 29, 11:43am  

In a world full of fiat currencies, arranging a common currency for separate national entities with separate governments is just a recipe for disaster. Why should smaller nations like Greece care about the strength of such a currency? Instead it's every nation for itself, out for as much "free money" as possible, which inevitably leads to yet another "tragedy of the commons."

Even states like we have in the US often chafe at having to balance their budgets. Some even come close to bankruptcy like Michigan, Illinois, and California. All blue states, btw.

10   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Jan 29, 11:55am  

thunderlips11 says

If Greece starts causing trouble, Spain and Italy will start causing trouble... then possibly France...

France is also paying for Greece. Do you think they want to pay more and see the Greeks having fun while themselves are forced to consolidate?

You may say whatever you want about the austerity imposed, the facts remain: others are paying for Greece, they don't like it, and Tsipras (and Greeks) would do well recognizing that and start acting like they are doing him a favor.

They all know Greece doesn't really belong in the euro.
They all know it should get out.
They all know Greece will eventually default, meaning they know they are losing all the money they are lending.
They have all prepared and are still preparing for that. And when it happens, it's not the rest of Europe that will suffer the most.

11   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Jan 29, 12:01pm  

thunderlips11 says

There's a whole lotta bad blood in the Eurozone over Austerity, Strong Euro Policies, etc.

To say a country like France is running austerity policies when they still have a large deficit and a fast growing debt doesn't make a lot of sense.

To say that they have 'strong euro' policies when they are printing a trillion and the euro is plunging also is doesn't fit with reality.

Most of what they are doing is not austerity, they are trying to do structural reforms to enhance competitiveness, and this is what is extremely unpopular because some people see their little advantages going away. Tough.

12   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 12:20pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

To say a country like France is running austerity policies when they still have a large deficit and a fast growing debt doesn't make a lot of sense.

Explain Iceland. A country with few resources, it flips the bird, and recovers the fastest. The rest are flagellating themselves - some like Spain and Greece to a great degree, others like France where workers have more balls to a lesser degree. In those countries who think austerity will appease the Econ God to make the rain fall again, they've recovered the slowest and the weakest. Some really aren't recovering at all.

It's hard to fire up demand and bring jobs when wages and benefits are being slashed. We already learned this lesson 1929-1932.

Austerity is a pleasing, but false, morality tale.

Heraclitusstudent says

To say that they have 'strong euro' policies when they are printing a trillion and the euro is plunging also is doesn't fit with reality.

It doesn't matter how much they print, when the Euro remains relatively strong against other currencies.

Same with the US, the Fed can print like a madman, but the USD is still the currency of record and stays strong, so it doesn't matter - at least not yet.

13   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Jan 29, 12:31pm  

thunderlips11 says

Explain Iceland. A country with few resources, it flips the bird, and recovers the fastest. The rest are flagellating themselves

That's BS. Of course you can let you entire financial industry go bankrupt and recover after that. And that means you stop borrowing. THIS is austerity, not what Europe is doing.

What Europe is doing is trying to have it both ways: keep their generous social lifestyle and at means keep borrowing, and that means honoring past debts. Generous social lifestyle in Europe requires bending to the will of a large financial industry. This is the exact opposite of what lefties would have you believe.

14   zzyzzx   2015 Jan 29, 12:55pm  

I wonder if the lenders were smart enough to require collateral?

15   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Jan 29, 1:18pm  

Lenders knew from the get go they would not be repaid.

16   smaulgld   2015 Jan 29, 1:34pm  

thunderlips11 says

If Greece starts causing trouble, Spain and Italy will start causing trouble... then possibly France...

correct that is why the EU can't just let Greece get better terms. I disagree that germany got the better of the deal
Its the other way around the poor countries because they were part of the euro got to borrow tons of money at super low rates to pay for their spending programs. If they were not in the Euro they could not have raised that much dough and would not owe so much now-dual edged sword.
With out european backing how is Greece going to pay for all the promises. Even if they get out from having to pay past obligations, they still have no tax revenue or assets.

17   smaulgld   2015 Jan 29, 1:36pm  

thunderlips11 says

Explain Iceland.

Iceland is totally different and much smaller. Greece didn't get screwed at all -THEY overspent and came running for a bailout that had surprise surprise conditions which they call "austerity" attached.
No one can answer WHO is going to pay for the new benefits, higher minimum wage etc .
Unlike venezueala , greece has no oil

18   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 1:55pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

What Europe is doing is trying to have it both ways: keep their generous social lifestyle and at means keep borrowing, and that means honoring past debts. Generous social lifestyle in Europe requires bending to the will of a large financial industry. This is the exact opposite of what lefties would have you believe.

Slashed spending aggressively

Unemployment rate skyrocketed, remains sky high past 20%, with only the slightest improvement recently:


Raised Taxes

Except on Corporations, which had their taxes cut:

Only to end up with about one year of "meh" growth after about 4-5 straight years of Austerity with increasing spending cuts and tax increases. How much of that is a general European extremely weak recovery, and how much is a result of policy? Who knows:

19   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 2:02pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

What Europe is doing is trying to have it both ways: keep their generous social lifestyle and at means keep borrowing, and that means honoring past debts. Generous social lifestyle in Europe requires bending to the will of a large financial industry. This is the exact opposite of what lefties would have you believe.

What Germany is doing is trying NOT to devalue the Euro to benefit exporters, particularly the agra and tourism heavy economies of Southern Europe, in order to maintain German Financial Sectors. They are pursuing the same "Strong Currency" policies the Fed tried at the onset of the Depression.

Strong currency to help the financial industry is also why the UK and US lost their industries in the 70s and 80s. Pittsburg and Manchester were thrown to the dogs to protect Wall Street and the City. Berlin is doing the same to Rome and Madrid to keep Frankfurt on top.

20   indigenous   2015 Jan 29, 2:10pm  

It is a current account thing, there are two sides of a trade. Germany made the loans in order to have customers. This automatically increases the money supply in the PIGS and forces saving in Germany. The saving is at the national level not at the consumer level. This is the same deal in China, in both cases it is mercantilism China by lowering the value of the Yuan and Germany though controlling the interest rates.

Spain will leave the Euro first, they have no choice it is either that or continued 25% unemployment.

The source of my thinking is from Michael Pettis' "The Great Rebalancing"

21   EBGuy   2015 Jan 29, 2:11pm  

TL, did you not get the memo; the ECB has fired up the printing presses.

22   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 2:14pm  

EBGuy says

TL, did you not get the memo; the ECB has fired up the printing presses.

I was speaking historically. But it's wonder that FINALLY, the ECB is engaging in some serious printing. That strong Euro was a killer. The ECB finally gave in to pressure - lots of elections around the corner, Greece just happened, and Spain is coming up real soon.

Now, watch some magic happen - in fact, it already has been for several months as the Euro has declined.

23   indigenous   2015 Jan 29, 2:18pm  

thunderlips11 says

I was speaking historically. But it's wonder that FINALLY, the ECB is engaging in some serious printing. That $1.30+ Euro was a killer.

Taint gunna work. The reason that is has the appearance of working in the US is that we are a debtor nation, Japan and Germany are a net saving countries, so inflation does them no good, just the opposite.

24   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 2:20pm  

indigenous says

Taint gunna work. The reason that is has the appearance of working in the US is that we are a debtor nation, Japan and Germany are a net saving countries, so inflation does them no good, just the opposite.

Deflation makes debtors default, so a balance has to be struck somewhere. There's a ton of politics in here of course - I amended my above post to reflect it.

There was also an attempt by Euro Neolibs (and led by Germany) to stop QE in the Courts, they have failed. Now they are trying to limit it.

25   EBGuy   2015 Jan 29, 2:26pm  

TL said: Now, watch some magic happen - in fact, it already has been for several months as the Euro has declined.
The magic is going to happen in the countries that got lean and mean. I fear that Greece is not one of them. Its generational warfare over there and when you break the bank, the pensioners will get clobbered. Ultimately, its probably better for the young, but, as HS said, it will be a true austerity felt across all of Greek society.

26   indigenous   2015 Jan 29, 2:32pm  

thunderlips11 says

Deflation makes debtors default, so a balance has to be struck somewhere. There's a ton of politics in here of course - I amended my above post to reflect it.

Deflation is going to occur no matter what Draghi does, it is part of the business cycle, the cheap money Draghi created exacerbated the problem.

The politics are that Draghi is fighting for his life. In the end the Euro will disband, I guarantee it, the PIGS first, led by Spain

27   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 2:34pm  

indigenous says

Deflation is going to occur no matter what Draghi does, it is part of the business cycle, the cheap money Draghi created exacerbated the problem.

I thought Austrians believed that money printing inevitably results in hyperinflation. Just like it did in 2010-2012. :)

The PIGS may still leave, that I agree with.

28   indigenous   2015 Jan 29, 2:36pm  

The spending habits are created by the countries monetary policy not the other way around.

The consumers in countries change when the policy changes. Germans were not always savers nor were Chinese.

29   indigenous   2015 Jan 29, 2:41pm  

thunderlips11 says

I thought Austrians believed that money printing inevitably results in hyperinflation. Just like it did in 2010-2012. :)

Some did, Mish pointed out that it did not occur because 4 trillion is 6% of the money supply.

It actually created deflation in 08 as lenders pulled back on loans.

30   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Jan 29, 2:45pm  

thunderlips11 says

Only to end up with about one year of "meh" growth after about 4-5 straight years of Austerity with increasing spending cuts and tax increases. How much of that is a general European extremely weak recovery, and how much is a result of policy?

Let me explain these charts for you: Spain had a large account deficit before the crisis. It was living off increasing debts, private debts in that case (it was more gov debt in Greece), caused by a housing bubble.

They HAD to solve this through the only ways possible: increasing productivity and cutting spending. Increasing productivity means cutting corporate taxes (and deregulation). Cutting spending means cutting gov deficit (raising personal income taxes) + cutting private spending (sales tax).

What they saw during these 5 years is not the consequences of austerity policies. These policies and the rest are just the fallout of the orgy in the years before that. And they are in a FAR better position now, in spite of what you can say of the unemployment. At least they have a path forward.

If you think there is a combination of weak money and gov spending that would have allowed the previous orgy to continue, you must believe in Santa Klaus.
Just because the US is doing it doesn't mean Spain could do it.

31   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 29, 6:06pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

Let me explain these charts for you: Spain had a large account deficit before the crisis. It was living off increasing debts, private debts in that case (it was more gov debt in Greece), caused by a housing bubble.

It was experiencing a housing bubble, caused by banks (including foreign banks) inflating the property markets in Spain.

Let's remember the same banks that caused the property bubble were the ones that fought and got deregulation over the past few decades. They insisted that more was necessary, even until that brief moment when "Wile E Coyote" was flailing in space just off the ledge above the chasm, that it was merely a rest period before continued growth.

They then begged for bailouts and got them. Government borrowed and printed and guaranteed with the public purse outrageous sums for these private institutions' bad debts.

We should remember that under post-Depression laws in most of the World (including original EU legislation) tightly regulated banks and no serious asset bubbles worldwide (or really nationwide) had appeared in property markets the late 90s, early 2000s super deregulation round.

Not only did deregulation cause the asset bubble, it misdirected countless trillions to construction and land purchases, at the opportunity cost of other segments of the economy, from retail to R&D to manufacturing.

In a word, huge scale "Malinvestment" that went unrevealed much longer than it should have.

Now, let's think about who is recommending Austerity. Banks who started the asset bubbles in the first place, like DeutscheBank. Institutions that backed deregulation to the hilt, like the IMF.

So the solution isn't to continue to starve non-financial segments of the economy through weakened spending, lowered demand thanks to stagnant/lower wages and higher unemployment, and increased taxation, but stop further damaging these sectors by forcing them to pay off the debt to the very banks and institutions that started the crisis.

We missed the opportunity to take a short term big hit by eliminating bad debt, making financial companies and investors eat their losses, and spreading their remaining good assets to new or more conservative institutions.

The solution now is most certainly not to continue to feed the parasite that caused the illness, but rather feed the rest of the body to get strong and healthy again.

Money is not backed by gold. Anything "Destroyed" by tossing out bad loans can be printed (or really created digitally) again and reinserted into the economy by a variety of transactions: Large infrastructure projects, R&D Grants, and flat out checks written to households.

32   indigenous   2015 Jan 29, 6:23pm  

thunderlips11 says

Now, let's think about who is recommending Austerity. Banks who started the asset bubbles in the first place, like DeutscheBank. Institutions that backed deregulation to the hilt, like the IMF.

Funny stuff, they make loans to countries who were not credit worthy and then want austerity.

thunderlips11 says

Not only did deregulation cause the asset bubble, it misdirected countless trillions to construction and land purchases, at the opportunity cost of other segments of the economy, from retail to R&D to manufacturing.

Nope once again, Glass Steagall did not regulate the derivative market, so it would have made no difference.

The solution is NO bailouts to mark to market, and let the market figure it out. It is infinitely smarter than you or Yellin or Bernanke or Draghi.

33   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 29, 6:30pm  

thunderlips11 says

Not only did deregulation cause the asset bubble

Non-recourse mortgage lending came about after banks gave out suicide loans and then picked up the collateral for a song once the loans blew up (while keeping the debtor in debt bondage for the full amount)

But, being a nation of children, we know little of our economic history.

Spain of course has horribly anti-borrower lending terms.

"Also problematic are Spain's punitive personal bankruptcy laws, which don't allow unpaid debt to be canceled and make it difficult for bankrupt persons to enter all kinds of contracts, from apartment leases to cellphone plans. Bankruptcy protection is so onerous in Spain that only 235 families applied for it in the fourth quarter of 2012—a 15% increase over a year earlier."

http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887324077704578362693213191094

(don't read the rest of that, it's just the wsj being the wsj)

34   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 29, 6:34pm  

thunderlips11 says

it misdirected countless trillions to construction and land purchases

Ireland was the Atlas of poster children here.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_property_bubble#Poor_financial_sector_supervision

35   Robert Sproul   2015 Jan 29, 6:40pm  

Brother Vlad has reached out:
Russia "may lift its ban on food imports from Greece in the event it quits the European Union"

36   Strategist   2015 Jan 29, 6:49pm  

Robert Sproul says

Brother Vlad has reached out:

Russia "may lift its ban on food imports from Greece in the event it quits the European Union"

An example of losers sticking together. :)

37   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Jan 29, 8:34pm  

thunderlips11 says

It was experiencing a housing bubble, caused by banks (including foreign banks) inflating the property markets in Spain.

What are you arguing here? That banks are bad by default? That no one else was involved? The Spanish government fully agreed with what was happening. And this was not unpopular with the spanish people. No one complained on the way in, like people complain about the consequences now. Everyone was in it.

Are you arguing that we should have let banks failed after the crisis? Then again, austerity would have been much worse. No banks, no loans. You would have gone to 35% unemployment. Then maybe after that you would rebound faster. This is the Austrian argument.

Are you arguing to default on the banks? Without bailing them out? That means letting banks fail.

You bail these banks out. Or you bail out people and they pay the banks. That's the same thing.

You have to see the obvious: you can't punish the banks without punishing people. You can't save people without saving the banks. Contrary to what lefties would want. People and banks go together.

The rest has nothing to do with banks, at least directly. It's a matter of how much the country as a whole consumes, and how much it produces. And this HAS to balance over time - unless you are the US. Hence Spain had to face reality and cut spending AND raise its productivity.

38   indigenous   2015 Jan 29, 8:46pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

Hence Spain had to face reality and cut spending AND raise its productivity.

That is not going to happen, like you said it is a current account thing the increase in liquidity increased consumption instead of investment. Which means 25% unemployment. They only real option is to leave the EU as then they can debase their currency.

39   HEY YOU   2015 Jan 29, 8:59pm  

U.S.A.,U.S.A.,U.S.A.

http://www.usdebtclock.org/

40   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 29, 9:09pm  

blue is Federal debt (ex-SSTF, ex-Fed) / GDP

red is interest expense / GDP

we're not really Greece, cuz we got a Fed.

Comments 1 - 40 of 101       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions