Tieless But Clueless



The Guardian reports that things in Greece are going from bad to worse and that political support for the Syriza-led government is collapsing which comes as no surprise as their strategy involves little more than blaming everyone else for the mess of the Greek economy.

Now the origins of Syriza lie in the old Greek Communist Party, but one of its current MPs, Liana Kanelli, puts her finger on the problem at the end of the Guardian piece: 

“Even if there is a temporary solution it will not solve our problems. Our country produces nothing. Its manufacturing base has been destroyed, it is de-industrialised and agriculturally deserted. What lies ahead is great, great hardship.”

Sadly, I think that's true, but reality is that the bulk of the heavy lifting required to turn things around needs to come from the Greeks themselves

Greeks’ view of the debt crisis: ‘What lies ahead is great, great hardship’

Three months on from Alexis Tsipras’s victory, hope is ebbing away and support for his party is haemorrhaging
 
A woman selling lottery tickets outside a closed shop in central Athens. Photograph: Alkis Konstantinidis/Reuters

By Helena Smith - The Guardian

Another week. Another crisis. Another make-or-break meeting that may, or may not, throw Greece into the unchartered waters of default, eurozone exit, destitution and despair.



It is a sliding scale of drama, of high-octane intensity that Greeks have learned to watch with a mixture of shock, angst, bewilderment and dismay. Today dismay predominates.

Five years on – Thursday was the fifth anniversary of the debt-stricken nation’s request for a bailout – there is an overriding sense of worse to come.

“All I see is worried faces,” sighs Giorgos Pappas, who has a bird’s-eye view of central Athens from his appropriately named Cosmos café. “Anyone who can is taking their money abroad. Nothing is moving; the market is dead.”

Riding high on the promise of hope, Alexis Tsipras’s anti-austerity government initially enjoyed unparalleled support. But three months later, with a life-saving deal no nearer with its creditors – the EU, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund – hope is ebbing. Greece desperately needs to find €7.2bn (£5.1bn) in funds under its €240bn bailout, but Athens’ inability to agree reforms in exchange for the money is pushing it to the brink of default.

Last week, surveys showed the Syriza party-led coalition haemorrhaging the popular backing that has kept it buoyant. Support for the leftists and their hard-line stance in negotiations has dropped precipitously. Only 45.5 % told pollsters at the University of Macedonia that they endorsed the government’s stance, compared with 72% in February.

After an unusually long, wet winter, the sun has come out, which has helped lift the mood. Tourists are pouring in and with them comes the feelgood spirit of spring. But no amount of coping can hide the exhaustion of a nation with no idea of what tomorrow will bring. What everyone does know, thanks to regular newspaper headlines, is that time is running out. The endgame is here because cash reserves are perilously close to running dry. The light at the end of the tunnel remains cutbacks and reforms: that is to say more misery for a country that has seen its economy contract by a quarter since 2010.

On the street foreboding grows. The sight of the government now scrambling to find funds, which included ordering local authorities and state organisations to hand over cash reserves last week, has sparked panic that bank deposits could be next. Amid talk of a parallel currency being introduced and civil servants being paid in IOUs, anxious savers have rushed to clear out their accounts. “Everyone thinks their savings will be next,” said an official at the Bank of Greece.

The finance ministry described the sequestration of local government funds as an “internal loan” but it was denounced as a coup d’etat by enraged mayors and prefects.

After meeting Angela Merkel on Thursday, Tsipras said he was optimistic an interim agreement would soon be reached. But Greeks know another bailout will be needed even if the short-term €7.2bn in secured.

“Even if there is a temporary solution it will not solve our problems,” sighed prominent communist MP, Liana Kanelli. “Our country produces nothing. Its manufacturing base has been destroyed, it is de-industrialised and agriculturally deserted. What lies ahead is great, great hardship.”

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