DaveO wrote:
Well austerity does have a negative impact on GDP. That is an economic fact and as the Greek's have just had more austerity heaped on them why would you expect any different? You don't need to believe me the IMF will tell you the same thing.
Of course austerity has a negative effect on GDP as it did in Ireland, Portugal and Spain. The difference with Greece, as I pointed out earlier in this thread, is that they failed to implement the fiscal and monetary structural changes that they had agreed to before they took the money. Had they done so they would have been in a better position. However this was the fault of the administration over the previous 5 years.
DaveO wrote:
Simplistic nonsense. They haven't snuffed anything out. Greece has been running a budget surplus and continues to do so if you disregard loan repayments. Of course you can't because if those repayments exceed the surplus you still have to borrow money to pay your creditors and that is what the whole argument has been about. Restructuring the debt so Greece can pay its creditors which it can't if this doesn't happen.
Despite the previous succession of poor governments in Greece there were some positive economic signs by January (small though they were) and as I said until these Syriza comedians took over and set the whole thing back by a further €50 billion. The debt will have to be restructured but without the necessary structural changes which include collecting taxes, real changes to the overgenerous pension terms for state workers, reducing the top heavy public sector etc etc
DaveO wrote:
The IMF pointed out what Varoufakis and Tsipras have been saying all along. That without debt relief there isn't a viable solution. On that they were signing from the same hymn sheet and to suggest otherwise is being disingenuous. What Varoufakis and Tsipras wanted was debt relief without further austerity as they believed that would contract the economy and make matters worse not better. This is not a controversial view and one shared by plenty of respected economists outside if Greece. The German's were having none of it and have won.
What Varoufakis and Tsipras say and do are quite different things. They may have had good intentions but they have made the situation much worse for the Greek people.
Their negotiating tactic was based on a scene from a restaurant in Athens: Greek Waiter speaking to the owner of the cafe
"table 2 can't pay their bill.......they've taken a vote, hoping you'll reduce the amount owing and lend them the money to pay the remainder"