Whose Europe is it anyway?
By Dimitris Galanis
In evaluating its programme to "rescue" Greece, the International Monetary Fund directly and clearly admits what we all knew: - that the purpose of the programme was not to rescue Greece but to save the banks of the eurozone.
With absolute cynicism the Fund concedes that it made tragic mistakes.
In the framework of an evaluation of the bailout programmes that were implemented between 2008 and 2017, the Executive Board of the Fund has in many instances pinpointed important miscalculations and omissions.
Belated mea culpa
Particularly in the case of Greece the wise members of the Board admit that the way the viability of the Greek debt was approached at the start was wrong-headed.
They say that disproportionate emphasis was given to fiscal adjustment and that macroeconomic projections were overly optimistic.
The report underlines that the delay in the restructuring of the debt undermined the prospects of a recovery of the Greek economy and it questions the efficacy of the 2012 haircut on the Greek debt with Private Sector Involvement (PSI).
Of course, these belated admissions mean nothing to the Greeks, who saw their standard of living hitting rock bottοm, the GDP of their country plunging, unemployment skyrocketing, young people emigrating, and many people committing suicide due to their economic dire straits.
The EU's blissful indifference
While the IMF admitted that it made a mess of things, the European Union remains blissfully indifferent.
In fact, German Chancellor Angela Merkel recently reiterated that the reforms in Greece proved correct, although she admitted that the burden on the Greek people was enormous.
"We helped those...
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