Europe split over Greek crisis

Antid Oto aorta at HOME.NL
Thu Mar 25 09:15:37 CET 2010


REPLY TO: D66 at nic.surfnet.nl

On eve of EU summit
Europe split over Greek crisis
By Stefan Steinberg
25 March 2010

European diplomats are working feverishly to reach some sort of
compromise on the Greek debt crisis and prevent an economic and
political debacle at the summit of European Union heads of government
meeting in Brussels Thursday and Friday.

The run-up to the summit was characterised by sharp differences
between leading EU officials and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who
has repeatedly insisted that no firm aid package be offered to
reassure the financial markets, which are betting heavily on a default
by the Greek state.

At the same time, the crisis in Greece, one of 16 countries that share
the European currency, is undermining international confidence in the
euro. The value of the euro has fallen sharply in recent weeks.

Athens needs to raise tens of billions of dollars to meet its debt
obligations in the coming months. Only recently, Greece’s social
democratic prime minister, George Papandreou, warned that his
government might not be able to meet its debt repayments because the
lack of a financial backup agreement is fuelling international
speculation against Greek government bonds, driving up Greece’s
borrowing costs and negating the savings from his draconian austerity
measures.

Within Greece, popular opposition to the austerity measures, which has
already resulted in two one-day general strikes, is mounting. The
Greek unions, which are closely linked to the social democratic PASOK
party of Papandreou, are doing their best to dissipate and exhaust the
opposition by limiting resistance to one-day actions and futile
protests. The position of the unions is that severe cuts in jobs,
wages and pensions are necessary, but they should made more “fair” and
the unions should be involved in their formulation.

At the same time, the unions in Greece are promoting nationalism to
divert popular anger away from Papandreou and block a unified struggle
of the European working class against austerity measures that are
being drawn up throughout the European Union.

The position of the German government was summed up by a “senior
official” quoted by Reuters as saying, “The condition for action, as a
last resort, is that Greece’s financing on the capital markets is
exhausted.”

One week ago, Chancellor Merkel distanced herself from her own finance
minister and declared she was prepared to accept the intervention of
the International Monetary Fund to help bail out Greece, while once
again stressing that she saw no reason for offering Greece any
European assistance.

Other EU countries, with France to the fore, together with German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble and the European Central Bank
(ECB), have thus far resisted any involvement by the IMF, regarding,
according to Der Spiegel magazine, “an intervention by the
Washington-based institution as a declaration of bankruptcy for Europe.”

In an interview with the German weekly Die Zeit this week, ECB
executive member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi reiterated the central bank’s
opposition to IMF assistance for Greece. “If the IMF steps in, the
image of the euro would be that of a currency that is able to survive
only with the external support of an international organisation….
Market reactions in the last few days have shown that resorting to the
IMF can be detrimental to the stability of the euro.”

Last Sunday, Merkel gave an interview on German radio in which she not
only declared that Greece had not asked for any money from the EU, but
added that to her knowledge the Greek crisis was not even on the
agenda of the EU summit.

The response from other European countries was prompt. On Monday,
French Foreign Minster Bernard Kouchner announced that the issue of
Greece would definitely be on the agenda and that he was confident a
solution would be found. Similar comments were made by the president
of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso.

The Greek government responded bitterly. Papandreou declared, “If it
is not on the agenda, we will put it on!”

French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Spanish Prime Minister José Luis
Rodríguez Zapetero proposed a separate meeting of the 16 eurozone
countries on Thursday to discuss the Greek crisis—only the second such
meeting in the 10-year history of the European currency.

Pressure for a deal in Brussels also came from the financial markets,
which drove the euro lower against the dollar this week. One market
strategist said on Wednesday: “The euro is increasingly vulnerable…as
traders come to terms with the fact that three months have elapsed
since the last credit downgrade of Greece and there is still no
credible solution on how it will obtain €56bn for its short-term
obligations.”

Against this background, government sources in Paris reported that
France was now prepared to accept the German proposal for an
intervention by the IMF. The IMF, however, has made clear that it
would not be able to provide all of the finance that Greece needs to
service its debts and expected the EU to contribute its own share of
funding. According to a report in the Financial Times, the IMF is
prepared to put up €10 billion of the estimated €20 billion required
by Greece, with the rest of the total to be raised in Europe.

European leaders have failed to arrive at any concrete agreement on
which nations should contribute to a bailout package for Greece.
Merkel has so far ruled out any contribution by Germany, arguing that
such assistance would contravene European treaty regulations and be
unconstitutional.

Berlin is also insisting that there be no let-up on pressure on the
Greek government to press ahead with its austerity measures. While
ruling out any concrete German aid, Merkel is adamant that assistance
from other sources be tied to strict adherence by Greece to its
cost-cutting programme. Germany is also seeking to link any deal in
Brussels to the adoption of much tougher rules to enforce budget
discipline in the eurozone.

While EU officials and diplomats are working frantically on a
compromise document for the summit, it is clear that any final
communiqué will remain noncommittal regarding European financial
commitments.

As the crisis deepens, European states are responding by seeking to
whip up nationalism, further exacerbating the centrifugal tendencies
that are tearing apart the EU. Singled out by powerful financial
institutions to create a precedent for beating down the living
standards of the entire European working class, Greece has now become
the battleground where the future of the eurozone and the European
Union as a whole is being fought out.

http://wsws.org/articles/2010/mar2010/gree-m25.shtml

**********
Dit bericht is verzonden via de informele D66 discussielijst (D66 at nic.surfnet.nl).
Aanmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SUBSCRIBE D66 uwvoornaam uwachternaam
Afmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SIGNOFF D66
Het on-line archief is te vinden op: http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/d66.html
**********



More information about the D66 mailing list