Europe’s Attack on Greek Democracy 
By Joseph E. Stiglitz
Project Syndicate, June 29, 2015
http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/greece-referendum-troika-eurozone-by-joseph-e--stiglitz-2015-06

NEW YORK – The rising crescendo of bickering and acrimony within Europe might
seem to outsiders to be the inevitable result of the bitter endgame playing out
between Greece and its creditors. In fact, European leaders are finally
beginning to reveal the true nature of the ongoing debt dispute, and the answer
is not pleasant: it is about power and democracy much more than money and
economics.

Of course, the economics behind the program that the “troika” (the European
Commission, the European Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund)
foisted on Greece five years ago has been abysmal, resulting in a 25% decline in
the country’s GDP. I can think of no depression, ever, that has been so
deliberate and had such catastrophic consequences: Greece’s rate of youth
unemployment, for example, now exceeds 60%.

It is startling that the troika has refused to accept responsibility for any of
this or admit how bad its forecasts and models have been. But what is even more
surprising is that Europe’s leaders have not even learned. The troika is still
demanding that Greece achieve a primary budget surplus (excluding interest
payments) of 3.5% of GDP by 2018.

Economists around the world have condemned that target as punitive, because
aiming for it will inevitably result in a deeper downturn. Indeed, even if
Greece’s debt is restructured beyond anything imaginable, the country will
remain in depression if voters there commit to the troika’s target in the snap
referendum to be held this weekend.

In terms of transforming a large primary deficit into a surplus, few countries
have accomplished anything like what the Greeks have achieved in the last five
years. And, though the cost in terms of human suffering has been extremely high,
the Greek government’s recent proposals went a long way toward meeting its
creditors’ demands.

We should be clear: almost none of the huge amount of money loaned to Greece has
actually gone there. It has gone to pay out private-sector creditors – including
German and French banks. Greece has gotten but a pittance, but it has paid a
high price to preserve these countries’ banking systems. The IMF and the other
“official” creditors do not need the money that is being demanded. Under a
business-as-usual scenario, the money received would most likely just be lent
out again to Greece.

But, again, it’s not about the money. It’s about using “deadlines” to force
Greece to knuckle under, and to accept the unacceptable – not only austerity
measures, but other regressive and punitive policies.

But why would Europe do this? Why are European Union leaders resisting the
referendum and refusing even to extend by a few days the June 30 deadline for
Greece’s next payment to the IMF? Isn’t Europe all about democracy?

In January, Greece’s citizens voted for a government committed to ending
austerity. If the government were simply fulfilling its campaign promises, it
would already have rejected the proposal. But it wanted to give Greeks a chance
to weigh in on this issue, so critical for their country’s future wellbeing.

That concern for popular legitimacy is incompatible with the politics of the
eurozone, which was never a very democratic project. Most of its members’
governments did not seek their people’s approval to turn over their monetary
sovereignty to the ECB. When Sweden’s did, Swedes said no. They understood that
unemployment would rise if the country’s monetary policy were set by a central
bank that focused single-mindedly on inflation (and also that there would be
insufficient attention to financial stability). The economy would suffer,
because the economic model underlying the eurozone was predicated on power
relationships that disadvantaged workers.

And, sure enough, what we are seeing now, 16 years after the eurozone
institutionalized those relationships, is the antithesis of democracy: Many
European leaders want to see the end of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s leftist
government. After all, it is extremely inconvenient to have in Greece a
government that is so opposed to the types of policies that have done so much to
increase inequality in so many advanced countries, and that is so committed to
curbing the unbridled power of wealth. They seem to believe that they can
eventually bring down the Greek government by bullying it into accepting an
agreement that contravenes its mandate.

It is hard to advise Greeks how to vote on July 5. Neither alternative –
approval or rejection of the troika’s terms – will be easy, and both carry huge
risks. A yes vote would mean depression almost without end. Perhaps a depleted
country – one that has sold off all of its assets, and whose bright young people
have emigrated – might finally get debt forgiveness; perhaps, having shriveled
into a middle-income economy, Greece might finally be able to get assistance
from the World Bank. All of this might happen in the next decade, or perhaps in
the decade after that.

By contrast, a no vote would at least open the possibility that Greece, with its
strong democratic tradition, might grasp its destiny in its own hands. Greeks
might gain the opportunity to shape a future that, though perhaps not as
prosperous as the past, is far more hopeful than the unconscionable torture of
the present.

I know how I would vote.
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