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Thursday 3 November 2011

Is Greece the most powerful country in the world?


Nov 01, 2011, 11:08
Posted by
Merryn Somerset Webb


The idea that Greece should have a referendum to decide on whether or not to 
accept the bail-out package from the rest of us has clearly come  as a bit of a 
shock to the politicians who like to think they run the eurozone. So far, 
absolutely no democracy whatsoever has been introduced  to the bail-out process 
and that, I daresay, is how they expected things to carry on. But the bail-out 
package comes with nasty conditions - public sector pay cuts, tax rises, lower 
pensions and the like – that it is hard to see any nation accepting without 
something of a fight.
 
So it makes sense for the Greek government to give the people the final say 
on the deal. If they don’t, they are bound to lose power soon anyway – this just 
gives them something of a chance of hanging on. You can’t have severe austerity 
without consent of some kind from your electorate. As John Redwood puts it: “In 
reality, there was no ability to deliver their preferred policy without some means 
like a referendum of getting people to accept the chosen course of action.
” The fact that the Greek government – seemingly alone among Europe’s governments – 
is prepared to recognise that big events of this sort need discussion with their populations 
as well as with the euro elite is actually rather heartening.

But the fact that markets are diving this morning should tell us one more thing. Greece
 has all the power. The talk around the bail-outs is usually about what Germany is 
prepared to do rather than what Greece is prepared to accept. Germany is assumed 
to have the power. But Greece has now shown the markets that it just isn’t so. 
If the Greeks decide they don’t fancy the terms much and announce a disorderly exit, 
it is game over for the euro, for Europe’s economy and for Germany’s weak-currency 
driven export boom.

Time for everyone to start being a bit more polite to Greece.  A senior member of 
Angela Merkel’s government has noted that he is irritated: 
“"Other countries are making considerable sacrifices for decades 
of mismanagement and poor leadership in Greece,” he says. I suspect that if they 
don’t want to have to start staving off the next banking crisis, they might have to 
make a few more. 

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