Wednesday, June 3, 2015

The Greeks are our neighbors – iOnline

 
                     

Perhaps Tsipras was elected with an impossible mandate: ending austerity in Europe where austerity was sufragada by most who sit on the boards  
                 

There will likely be an agreement any last minute to prevent the Greece of bankruptcy in the coming days. Clearly, things never end well in (the vote of the Greek people is incompatible with the hard line of the euro zone), but may end up in more or less. Incidentally, the alarm over the risk of a Greek exit from the euro zone are already sound, starting with Berlin. Social – Democrats who are part of the German government has openly show the unease with Europe’s inability to find a solution to the Greek question. Sigmar Gabriel, the deputy foreign minister and leader of the SPD, has said that the consequences of the Greek bankruptcy would be “huge”. Sigmar Gabriel to, which is far from being an extremist left (actually, its financial policy is very similar to that of Merkel and Schäuble), the world would lose all confidence in Europe’s economic and monetary union to fall apart in his first major crisis. The United States is in a panic – for economic reasons but mainly because Greece, a NATO member, occupies an important geostrategic position.


 
 

Several economists – including an economics professor Deputy Syriza – argue that Greece would be better off outside the euro than inside. The ability to manage its own currency would make it easier a way out of the crisis. It turns out that Syriza was elected to keep the program in euro at all costs, but doing away with the austerity and the suffering that has been imposed on families. The Varoufakis itself is profoundly against the output of the euro, which ranks as a “disaster”.


 
 

Perhaps Tsipras was elected with an impossible mandate: ending austerity in Europe where austerity was sufragada by most who sit in the European Councils, and not just by Merkel. But Tsipras’s defeat will prove that there are no alternative ways out of the “correct line” of Europe that drove social democracy as an ideology of government.


 
 

A break of Greece with Europe – a scenario with unpredictable consequences – would, in principle, why the Portuguese government, which took advantage of these years to prove that it was “good student”. It would be the victory of TINA (There Is No Alternative, as the prevailing ideology in Europe became known) and punched in the PS, which generally promises a new socialist government would make a break with the austerity policy, much as Costa has been committed to move away from Syriza in recent times. But regardless of which of the speeches would be favored in the worst case scenario, actually the fragility of Portugal would leave the country chained to the Greek defeat. If you open Pandora’s box, it is likely that the interest on the debt of Portugal to shoot at the height of the euro crisis. Portugal should be rooting for Greece – unfortunately not. The PSD you can see why, the PS means more difficult.


 
 
 
                 

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