report on this article in Greek:

http://tvxs.gr/news/eyropi-eop/mark-weisbrot-stoxos-ton-eyropaion-einai-na-riksoyn-ton-tsipra

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mark Weisbrot, CEPR <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 1:24 PM
Subject: Are the European Authorities Trying to Get Rid of the Greek
Government?
To: [email protected]


     [image: CEPR logo]
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=OC8KX5TMyJIn7gLaCeVIAGsv5o04dcaC>
Are the European Authorities Trying to Get Rid of the Greek Government?
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=1BfQZ88WnTXcHfabu5Q1Q2f7ty3xzqDe>


By Mark Weisbrot
------------------------------

This article was published by *The Globe and Mail *
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=1veHEp5vBMabBIHFbLXih2sv5o04dcaC>on
June 30, 2015. If anyone wants to reprint it, please let us know by
replying to this message.
------------------------------

It is ironic but not surprising that the European Central Bank (ECB) on
Sunday decided to limit its credit to Greece by enough to force the Greek
banking system to close.

This has pushed Greece closer to a more serious financial crisis than they
have had in the past five years of austerity-induced depression. Why did
the ECB decide to take this harsh, unnecessary, and dangerous measure now?

It seems clear that this move is in response to the Greek government’s
decision to hold a referendum on whether to accept the last offer from the
European authorities on conditions for continuing official lending to
Greece. The financial problems and inconveniences of this week, caused by
the bank holiday, are the European authorities’ way of saying, “Vote as
we’ll tell you to, or we can make your lives even more miserable than we
have been making them for the past five years.”

This offer included further cuts to Greek pensions, as well as regressive
tax increases. As economist Paul Krugman noted
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=K%2F3LR9F0vBFS%2FcfbRn0Mo2sv5o04dcaC>,
these are conditions that Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras cannot accept. “The
purpose must therefore be to drive him from office,” Krugman concluded.

There is considerable evidence
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=QOlxGk7tnAoHxMC6yT7%2BoWsv5o04dcaC>
that this has been the European authorities’ strategy since Syriza was
elected on January 25.  Just 10 days later, on February, the ECB cut off
its main line of credit to Greek banks, even though there was no obvious
reason to do so. Shortly thereafter, the ECB put a limit on how much Greek
banks could lend to the government – a limit that the previous government
did not have.

>From the European authorities’ point of view, “regime change” is the only
logical strategy. They have a nuclear weapon, which is to cut credit to
Greece entirely – thus precipitating a Greek financial meltdown that would
force the country out of the euro—but German Chancellor Angela Merkel
doesn’t want this, and neither does her ally, President Obama. So the
European authorities continue to take steps to undermine the Greek economy
and government, hoping to get rid of the government and get a new one that
will do what they want.

The European authorities had already succeeded in pushing the Greek
economy—which was projected to grow by 2.5 percent this year—back into
recession. This is due to their credit restrictions and the damaging effect
of their game of brinkmanship with the Greek government. Now they have gone
further in order to intimidate Greek voters into a “yes” vote.

European officials such as European Commission President Jean-Claude
Juncker have tried to convince Greeks that a “no” vote would be a vote to
leave the eurozone. But this is not true. It could well be that a “no” vote
strengthens the hand of the government to get a better deal, given that the
most powerful people in the world don’t want to see an economic collapse
that forces Greece out of the euro.

The European authorities are offering no future to Greece – no light at the
end of the tunnel, especially for the 60 percent of young people who are
already unemployed because of their failed policies. But there are always
alternatives to years of economic recession, stagnation, and mass
unemployment.

These alternatives are not radical but mostly nothing more than the
stimulus policies that dozens of countries, including the United States,
implemented in response the world financial crisis and recession of
2008-2009.  But the European authorities will not allow the Greek economy
to recover. The first step for Greece must therefore begin with saying “no.”


Mark Weisbrot
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=jHaM1I8N99dZcO4LLtJB%2BGf7ty3xzqDe>
is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in
Washington, D.C. and president of Just Foreign Policy
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=V4Tp%2BSDSHNVy5x92Rb1eJmsv5o04dcaC>.
He is also the author of the forthcoming book *Failed: What the "Experts"
Got Wrong About the Global Economy*
<http://org.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=Ou5Cr15JmuS7wuL0zP%2FgMmsv5o04dcaC>
(Oxford University Press, 2015).

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