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posted by janrinok on Friday July 10 2015, @08:08AM   Printer-friendly
from the another-view dept.

In the news media (e.g. NPR, BBC, CNN, etc.) there is a dominate consensus that Greece must eventually give in to demands to reduce pensions and make further cuts in government spending in exchange for a new loan to help pay off defaulted loans, even if acknowledging that the Greek people have high unemployment and a failing economy.

However, for those not yet exposed to an alternate perspective which is not generally aired in the news media, you might read this bit of a rant by Prof. William K. Black. William Kurt Black is an American lawyer, academic, author, and a former bank regulator. Black's expertise is in white-collar crime, public finance, regulation, and other topics in law and economics. He developed the concept of "control fraud", in which a business or national executive uses the entity he or she controls as a "weapon" to commit fraud. In this piece, William Black make ssome some interesting points about the Greek crisis, of which I cut and paste a few excerpted points:

1. That economists overwhelmingly believe on the basis of theory and experience that austerity in response to a Great Recession constitutes economic malpractice akin to bleeding a patient until it restores him to health.

2. That austerity has caused, as predicted, a human catastrophe in Greece

3. That austerity and the oxymoronic "labor reforms," by reducing wages and the safety net throughout the eurozone, the bailout of German banks, and the sale of Greek infrastructure and islands to wealthy Germans at fire sale prices are very much in the interests of the elite German corporate and banking CEOs that dominate domestic German politics, the Germany economy, and the troika

4. That when a debtor has unsustainable debts, the normal and desirable response is to negotiate a troubled debt restructuring (TDR) to reduce the debt to a level that can be repaid. Even the IMF, the mother of monstrous austerity, admits that the Greek debt is unsustainable.

5. That a TDR was done for German[y], which was essential to its economic recovery. (after WWII)

6. That the Greek "bailout" was a bailout of foreign EU banks, primarily French and German – not the Greek government or people. That bailout of the eurozone's largest banks is funded by eurozone taxpayers. The muted reaction of the commercial markets to the Greek "No" vote is largely attributable to the fact that the bailout of French and German banks by eurozone taxpayers has been completed. The remaining loss exposure of the large eurozone banks on the loans they made seven or more years ago to Greek banks is tiny. The reason EU elected officials are so apoplectic to the Greek "No" vote is that the eurozone taxpayers are on the hook because they bailed out the (primarily) French and German banks. If the eurozone taxpayers suffer losses in the range of one hundred billion euros those taxpayers might turn on those EU elected officials who represent the interests of elite bankers at the expense of the peoples of the eurozone. The NYT article ignores all this and, without any analysis, treats the bailout as if it were a bailout of the Greek people.

To me it this final point which resonates after witnessing the the U.S. bailout of to-big-to fail banks after making a number of risky (sometimes fraudulent) loans to homeowners.

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 10 2015, @10:12AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 10 2015, @10:12AM (#207350)

    Your personal finances and the finances of a country/continent are quite different.

    The way you get an economy back on its feet is to put everyone to work.
    You really need to do some study on The New Deal.
    It's the way USA dealt with the failed economics of the Republican administrations from the 1920s till 1933 (which caused The Great Depression).

    -- gewg_

  • (Score: 2) by scruffybeard on Friday July 10 2015, @06:29PM

    by scruffybeard (533) on Friday July 10 2015, @06:29PM (#207573)

    I agree that putting people to work is what made the New Deal successful, however things are different now. In the 30's you could hire 25 men to support a road construction project. Today you can probably do the same work with 4 men and a backhoe. On top of it, those men in the past required little to no knowledge of how to do the job. Today those workers have had a few years of vocational training, and probably have some kind of additional license or certification to work on the job site. Additionally, lets not forget that while the New Deal programs certainly helped, it was WWII that broke us out of the Great Depression.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 10 2015, @07:37PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 10 2015, @07:37PM (#207604)

      War! What is it good for? Breaking us out of bad economic times.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 10 2015, @08:24PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 10 2015, @08:24PM (#207629)

      Some points you overlooked:
      - Current unemployment[1] in the USA (over 23 percent) is approaching the worst levels of The Great Depression.
      A corresponding percentage of the production infrastructure is idle.

      [1] The real numbers--NOT the dummied-up junk USA.gov reports. [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [counterpunch.org]
      Note also that the 2.4 million people in prisons aren't counted.

      - There were and are a huge number of highly skilled people without jobs.
      In the 1930s, those skills were put to use. [google.com]
      What happened then is NOT the case today; we continue in a downward spiral.
      We needed a John Maynard Keynes and an FDR; what we got was Larry Summers and Caspar Milquetoast.
      (At least the training-for-non-existent-jobs fraud is finally being exposed for the scam it is.)

      it was WWII that broke us out of the Great Depression

      Myth. By 1937, the economy had improved enough that FDR eased off on his policies--and the economy headed straight into the crapper again.
      He quickly went back to listening to John Maynard Keynes and again went back to ignoring the "wisdom" of the "geniuses" on Wall Street.

      You consume WAY too much Lamestream Media.

      -- gewg_