This
month, August 2018, marks the ‘end’ of the 3rd debt bailout of Greece,
2015-18. If one were to believe the European and US press, Greece has
now recovered and emerged from the bailout and its now nearly
decade-long debt crisis, and the depression it created. But that
conclusion couldn’t be further from the truth.
Greece has
only now exchanged one set of creditors for another. In the first
bailout in 2010 it was mostly the private banks of Europe to which it
was indebted. In the second bailout, the pan-European state institutions
(sometimes called the Troika: (European Commission, European Central
Bank, International Monetary Fund) stepped in and provided loans for
Greece to bailout its private creditors. In fact, Greece never saw the
money. The Troika paid off the private investors and in effect
transferred their debt to Troika balance sheets. Greece had to make even
larger payments–this time to the Troika. The Troika then paid off the
banks. (German Institute studies show that 95% of all the payments on
debt by Greece to the Troika eventually were redistributed by the Troika
to the northern European banks). The Troika thus served as the
‘middleman’ bill collector for the bankers.
The Eurozone’s
double dip recession of 2011-13 exacerbated Greece’s debt still
further, requiring it to borrow even more in 2015-18 to pay the Troika
debt in incurred in 2012-15 (that was incurred to pay the 2010 private
debt). So Greece was further indebted in 2015-18 to finance and pay for
the debt in incurred in 2012 to pay for the debt it incurred in 2010.
Each time a new debt deal was agreed to, the debt was in effect ‘rolled
over’. Whether paid through the Troika or directly, the payments always
end up in the private Euro banks.
Now the press
‘spin’ is that Greece is emerging from this raising new debt to pay for
past debt. But not so. All that’s changed is that Greece can now borrow
(i.e. more debt) from private investors once again, as it had before
2012. This time, it will borrow from the private sector (bond
speculators, hedge funds, other vulture capitalists) in order to pay off
the Troika for past debt.
How does
Greece pay the interest on the debt? From austerity imposed on its
citizens, especially workers, small businesses, the poor. The Greek
state and the Greek central bank (a mere appendage of the European
Central Bank under the Euro) collect the surplus managed by the
Greek-Syriza government (from tax hikes, pension cuts, wage cuts, sale
of national industries–i.e. austerity). The Greek central bankers then
make the interest payments on the debt from loans from the Troika (who
pay the bankers). Now Greece can continue paying the Troika and bankers
indirectly, while it borrows anew from private investors once again and
pays them interest on the new debt as well.
Nothing
changes for the austerity measures. Austerity remains. Greek
unemployment still remains at depression levels at 19.5% Employment
levels are still 17.5% below pre-depression period highs. Greek wages
continue to stagnate: Skilled workers’ wages have been cut 35%,
unskilled cut 31%, and minimum wages reduced by 22%. Pensions continue
to be cut and age eligibility to collect a pension raised by 10 years.
Taxes have been raised on workers and small businesses alike. It’s still
austerity by another name. And they call it recovery! The only change
is who is the bill collector? The Troika? The new private lenders? Both?
The answer is now both. The Troika moves to the sidelines and let’s the
private vulture investors once again step in to loan Greece money (to
pay the Troika and their Euro banks), while the vultures once again
charge interest on top of the new debt they extend to Greece.
In my 2016
book, ‘Looting Greece: A New Financial Imperialism Emerges’, Clarity
Press, I described this new form of exploitation on a national scale, in
which State institutions and apparatuses now play in the 21st century
an increasing direct role in extracting surplus and value from workers
and small business classes on behalf of the big capitalist banks. This
is a form of imperialism different from pre-20th century and early 20th
century explanations (influenced heavily by Lenin and Hilferding). In
the concluding chapter the historical evolution of imperialism from 19th
to 21st century are discussed, and the various debates. Greece is the
microcosm case example of the new form.
*
This article was originally published on the author’s blog site: Jack Rasmus.
Dr. Jack Rasmus is a frequent contributor to Global Research.
