
During their election campaign, the Syriza movement promised the
people of Greece an end to the inhumane politics of austerity and the
dictatorship of the Troika.
After being elected in January, Prime Minister Tsipras and his
Finance Minister Varoufakis negotiated with the EU commission, the ECB
and the IMF for almost five months. While fulfilling almost all of their
financial demands, Syriza’s leaders openly criticized the
“institutions” for their tough bargaining and resisted some of their
harshest measures.
At the beginning of July, the Troika tightened its grip on Greece.
Tsipras and Varoufakis in return called for a referendum in which the
people of Greece took a very clear stance and said “no” to the
continuation of austerity politics.
Rather than fulfill this mandate, Tsipras responded with a 180-degree
turnaround. He dismissed his finance
minister, went to Brussels and
accepted the most far-reaching austerity measures ever imposed on his
country.
Meanwhile Tsipras has survived two votes in the Greek parliament with
the support of exactly those forces whom he once called his political
adversaries. He has also removed all those members from his cabinet that
were unwilling to follow his new course.
Last Wednesday, both Tsipras and his former finance minister went
even further by giving their consent to a reform package that will
facilitate foreclosures and home evictions. Given the disastrous
economic situation, high unemployment and the ongoing capital controls,
thousands of home owners will fall into arrears with their interest and
repayment installments in the coming months and thus become victims of
this new legislation, which will go into effect on 1 January 2016.
Tsipras and Varoufakis, who loved posing as the advocates of the
common people during their election campaign, are thus frankly siding
with collecting agencies and openly turning their backs on working
people strangled by debt.
However, there was worse to come in Wednesday’s vote. Pretending to
“protect “Greek taxpayers, Tsipras and Varoufakis also gave their
consent to the EU’s Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD). This
legislation provides for the replacement of bailouts of banks with
taxpayers’ money by the partial expropriation of savers, depositors and
shareholders.
To understand the true nature of a bail-in, one only has to take a
look at what happened in Cyprus in the spring of 2013. There, depositors
with more than 100,000 euros in their accounts lost 40 percent of their
money, which was used to ’recapitalize’ their bank. The measure was a
devastating blow for the middle class, small businesses and retirees who
lost a large part of their lifetime savings.
Although deposits under 100,000 euros are officially protected within
the EU, this is no guarantee that they will be left untouched. After
most large depositors removed their money during the past months, the
four biggest banks in Greece – Piraeus Bank, Alpha Bank, Eurobank and
the National Bank of Greece – presently only hold deposits of around 130
billion euros. It is estimated that 40 to 50 percent of their loans are
not being serviced and only 40 percent of customers’ deposits exceed
8,000 euros. Strangled by bad loans, these four banks that make up 90
percent of Greece’s banking business, are desperate to increase their
equity capital and therefore urgently need fresh money.
By the way, the agreement between the Troika and the government of
Cyprus in 2013 was not based on any existing laws, but concluded on the
basis of a quickly resolved “agreement” between the rulers in Nicosia
and the EU. Implementing a similar “emergency agreement” in Greece would
probably not present a big problem to the EU or the Troika. As reported
by the Financial Times and confirmed by one of the banks
concerned, such a measure has already been discussed. According to their
sources, Greek authorities are aiming at a 30 percent haircut for all
deposits exceeding 8,000 euros.
Tsipras as well as Varoufakis must have known this when they voted in
favor of the BRRD on Wednesday. They have thus willingly contributed to
a further deepening of the assaults not only on the working people and
the middle class of Greece, but also on millions of savers, depositors
and small enterpreneurs in Serbia, Albania, Bulgaria, Macedonia and
Romania who maintain their accounts at the regional subsidiaries of the
large Greek banks and whose living standards in some cases are far below
those of Greece. They, too, will in all probability be subjected to a
bail-in.
On the weekend before before the vote, Yannis Varoufakis gave an interview to the Spanish newspaper El Mundo
in which he described the creditors of his country as “terrorists”. Is
there a better way of demonstrating one’s moral depravity than by
consenting to the partial expropriation of working people and the
destruction of the lifelong work of small entrepreneurs only three days
after making a statement like that?
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario