Pandora’s Box of Problems for Greece
Douglas says that the Troika are really bailing out the creditors, not Greece — and that is the plan to solve Greece’s financial situation.
"This keeps the creditors off the Greek government’s back, but if the condition is austerity then it can’t do anything about unemployment, it can’t get back to growth, and it can’t get out of its situation.
"The Troika have shown themselves willing to keep paying off creditors and shuffling liabilities from one balance sheet to the next, so long as they retain the authority to keep Greece in depression conditions. That’s enough to show, in my view, that they’re not really trying to solve a financial problem at all."..."
Varoufakis resigned from his government position after persuading the Greek people to reject the bailout money from the Troika.
But what Douglas really believes the Troika want is blood.
Douglas says that the Troika are really bailing out the creditors, not Greece — and that is the plan to solve Greece’s financial situation.
"This keeps the creditors off the Greek government’s back, but if the condition is austerity then it can’t do anything about unemployment, it can’t get back to growth, and it can’t get out of its situation.
"The Troika have shown themselves willing to keep paying off creditors and shuffling liabilities from one balance sheet to the next, so long as they retain the authority to keep Greece in depression conditions. That’s enough to show, in my view, that they’re not really trying to solve a financial problem at all."
In another, Greece is no different to any other debt laden country and has been suffering for years. Its debt, according to economics and philosophy expert Alexander Douglas, is morally and politically different.
"In financial terms, the Greek debt is unpayable, but so are the sovereign debts of many Eurozone nations,” Alexander Douglas explains to Sputnik. "Unpayable debts are usually generated through financial fraud: overrating the creditworthiness of borrowers.
"In most nations, the fraud was perpetrated by the private banks, who were lending to non-creditworthy borrowers. When the banks had to be bailed out, the bad liabilities ended up on the government’s balance sheet.
Punished Without Mercy
"Apparently it’s fine to let your banking system get up to the eyeballs in fraud and then bail it out when the game is up, but if you actively participate in the fraud, then you must be punished without mercy. This moral distinction strikes me as less important than it’s made out to be by those in charge," says Douglas.
"Basically, I think the framers of the monetary union are embarrassed that they built a non-functioning system. To admit their mistake would hurt their pride, so they try to moralize the issue instead.”
According to financial analyst Patrick Young, the deadlocked discussions that led to the referendum still appear shut.
"Nobody is able to move. The International Monetary Fund is in a tight corner and risking internal dissent. The European Union is in chaos.
"Bulgarian currency is now circulating freely in northern Greece – signs that the end of the Euro is imminent," Young told Sputnik. The tragedy of the Troika is that they’ve ignored the people to preserve the construct of the monetary union."
"The plight of the people is tragic. The situation is not going to get better in the interim term, there will be many weeks of turmoil ahead and pain and suffering for the Greek people. It’s a wretched situation."
Jeroen Dijsselbloem, head of the Eurogroup of finance ministers said "difficult measures and reforms are inevitable," in order for Greece to recover.
Finance ministers are to hold emergency talks on Tuesday. And with chaos all around them, the Greek government says Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has agreed to present a proposal to Germany’s Angela Merkel and on Tuesday. So perhaps Prime Minister Tsipras shares in the people’s hope – and that hope remains firmly inside a Pandora’s Box.
Yanis Varoufakis
Alexis Tsipras