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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Greece: It’s looking like NO

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  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,844
    rcs1000 said:

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the economic parameters of a bailout negotiation. The Greeks, many said, benefited from low interest rates and repayments stretched out over many years. Therefore, no debt relief was needed. But, of course, as the IMF now makes clear, if a country has to repay about 4 percent of its income each year over the next 40 years and that country has poor growth prospects precisely because repaying that debt will lower growth, then debt is not sustainable. If this report had been made public earlier, the tone of the public debate and the media’s boorish stereotyping of Greeks and its government would have been balanced by greater clarity on the Greek position."

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    It is easy to break.

    Leave the Eurozone.

    But Greece's government has promised the people there is no need to leave the Eurozone.

    (As an aside, even before the crisis, Greece had the worst ratio of working people to government retirees in the world. In the Euro, outside the Euro, that is not sustainable.)
    They need more immigrants to support their retirees. (Just as we do).
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,035
    'New Democracy' to revamp as 'New New Democracy'?
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,449
    kle4 said:

    MaxPB said:

    rcs1000 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the economic parameters of a bailout negotiation. The Greeks, many said, benefited from low interest rates and repayments stretched out over many years. Therefore, no debt relief was needed. But, of course, as the IMF now makes clear, if a country has to repay about 4 percent of its income each year over the next 40 years and that country has poor growth prospects precisely because repaying that debt will lower growth, then debt is not sustainable. If this report had been made public earlier, the tone of the public debate and the media’s boorish stereotyping of Greeks and its government would have been balanced by greater clarity on the Greek position."

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    While interest payments of 4% of GDP is high, it is by no means unprecedented. See the chart on this page for the UK: http://www.economicshelp.org/blog/3028/economics/interest-payments-on-uk-debt/

    In any case, the issue has never been does Greece need a haircut. Yes, of course it does.

    But Greece has had one haircut. And the creditors who accepted that haircut did on the condition of reforms and privatisations that did not happen. Can you blame them for demanding that Greece carried our what it previously promised?
    Shouldn't they be blaming themselves ?

    Since the institutions most exposed are now those governments which turned a blind eye to Greece's unsuitability to enter the Euro shouldn't they just face facts and cough up ?

    Why does moral hazard only apply to the borrower ?
    If I lend you 100 pounds on the condition you stop going to the pub every night, and you then continue to go.

    And you then ask for another 100 pounds, am I not entitled to be cross?
    But once you've lent the hundred quid and Alanbrooke keeps going to the pub even after super-promising not to, who is really at fault?
    Both, but Alanbrooke moreso. Enabling someone can be both foolish and destructive, but the person taking advantage of the enabling still had a choice not to do it.
    Not really, it's the same as giving an alcoholic the keys to an off licence and asking him to look after it on holiday and then coming back to find your stock has been drunk and being angry at the alcoholic for doing it. A second time no less!
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    kle4 said:

    'New Democracy' to revamp as 'New New Democracy'?

    Surely "One Nation Democracy" is next on the list?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Barnesian, that's just a human pyramid scheme (ahem).
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @BBCGavinHewitt: Poland's PM says if 'no' vote confirmed then Greece will have no choice but to leave the eurozone.#Grefenderum
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 32,739

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the economic parameters of a bailout negotiation. The Greeks, many said, benefited from low interest rates and repayments stretched out over many years. Therefore, no debt relief was needed. But, of course, as the IMF now makes clear, if a country has to repay about 4 percent of its income each year over the next 40 years and that country has poor growth prospects precisely because repaying that debt will lower growth, then debt is not sustainable. If this report had been made public earlier, the tone of the public debate and the media’s boorish stereotyping of Greeks and its government would have been balanced by greater clarity on the Greek position."

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    Greece needs to make structural reforms if it wants to grow, either within or without the EZ, or for that matter the EU.

    Corruption, a feather bedded civil service, an expensive military, an inflexible labour force, a low fertility rate and an unwillingness to pay or collect taxes are the obstacles to economic growth.
    As is membership of the Euro for them. Of course you miss that one out.

    If Greece had not been in the Eurozone then although they would still have been in trouble it would have been no where near as serious. And remember much - the vast majority in fact - of the current debt was not built up under the current radical Socialist government but under the previous pro EU, IMF compliant centre left and centre right governments. Even jumping through every hoop demanded of them they still couldn't make it work because basically the EU and IMF demands were unachievable.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @paulwaugh: Good night Greece! says the German CSU https://t.co/VYMk3iFFuN

    @FraserNelson: Germany's economic minister says Greeks have "torn down the last bridges" for reaching compromise with EU: http://t.co/89dSTLYVoh
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,153

    Mr. 1000, is such a ratio of workers to retirees sustainable *in* the euro?

    Nope.

    I've said it once, I'll say it another million times: Greece should have left the Eurozone in an orderly fashion following the SYRIZA elections at the beginning of this year, and with the full support of the IMF.

    Greek politicians have lied to their people with regards to the pensions they can receive. They have lied to them about the level of taxes they must pay. They have lied to them about the consequences of voting No.

    And now the savers - the people who behaved responsibly - will be the ones to pay to the price.
  • FalseFlagFalseFlag Posts: 1,801

    rcs1000 said:

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the economic parameters of a bailout negotiation. The Greeks, many said, benefited from low interest rates and repayments stretched out over many years. Therefore, no debt relief was needed. But, of course, as the IMF now makes clear, if a country has to repay about 4 percent of its income each year over the next 40 years and that country has poor growth prospects precisely because repaying that debt will lower growth, then debt is not sustainable. If this report had been made public earlier, the tone of the public debate and the media’s boorish stereotyping of Greeks and its government would have been balanced by greater clarity on the Greek position."

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    It is easy to break.

    Leave the Eurozone.

    But Greece's government has promised the people there is no need to leave the Eurozone.

    (As an aside, even before the crisis, Greece had the worst ratio of working people to government retirees in the world. In the Euro, outside the Euro, that is not sustainable.)
    I agree that will be a start. But they will still need a huge cut in debt. And as it stands without leaving the EU they cannot leave the Eurozone.
    Exactly, Greece has carried the burden of propping up the French and German banking systems, the new loans they were given only increased the problem. They have a solvency problem not a liquidity problem, large scale debt forgiveness has always been necessary, it is the EU who have been responsible for this outcome and birthed Syriza.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Having made a modest amount on the No vote, surely Grexit in 2015 at 2.74 on Betfair is good value shortly?

  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 32,739
    Barnesian said:

    rcs1000 said:

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the economic parameters of a bailout negotiation. The Greeks, many said, benefited from low interest rates and repayments stretched out over many years. Therefore, no debt relief was needed. But, of course, as the IMF now makes clear, if a country has to repay about 4 percent of its income each year over the next 40 years and that country has poor growth prospects precisely because repaying that debt will lower growth, then debt is not sustainable. If this report had been made public earlier, the tone of the public debate and the media’s boorish stereotyping of Greeks and its government would have been balanced by greater clarity on the Greek position."

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    It is easy to break.

    Leave the Eurozone.

    But Greece's government has promised the people there is no need to leave the Eurozone.

    (As an aside, even before the crisis, Greece had the worst ratio of working people to government retirees in the world. In the Euro, outside the Euro, that is not sustainable.)
    They need more immigrants to support their retirees. (Just as we do).
    They currently have 69,000 of them all fresh off boats from North Africa. In fact they have had more migrants in this present crisis than Italy.
  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865
    Open Europe @OpenEurope
    Hollande & Merkel have called for emergency meeting of Eurozone leaders on Tuesday reports @N24. #Greece
    9:10 PM - 5 Jul 2015
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @JGForsyth: German rhetoric suggests that they are preparing to try and kick Greece out of the Euro http://t.co/Ddb4s0zJMF
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,153
    FalseFlag said:

    rcs1000 said:

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the economic parameters of a bailout negotiation. The Greeks, many said, benefited from low interest rates and repayments stretched out over many years. Therefore, no debt relief was needed. But, of course, as the IMF now makes clear, if a country has to repay about 4 percent of its income each year over the next 40 years and that country has poor growth prospects precisely because repaying that debt will lower growth, then debt is not sustainable. If this report had been made public earlier, the tone of the public debate and the media’s boorish stereotyping of Greeks and its government would have been balanced by greater clarity on the Greek position."

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    It is easy to break.

    Leave the Eurozone.

    But Greece's government has promised the people there is no need to leave the Eurozone.

    (As an aside, even before the crisis, Greece had the worst ratio of working people to government retirees in the world. In the Euro, outside the Euro, that is not sustainable.)
    I agree that will be a start. But they will still need a huge cut in debt. And as it stands without leaving the EU they cannot leave the Eurozone.
    Exactly, Greece has carried the burden of propping up the French and German banking systems, the new loans they were given only increased the problem. They have a solvency problem not a liquidity problem, large scale debt forgiveness has always been necessary, it is the EU who have been responsible for this outcome and birthed Syriza.
    Oh pu'lease.

    German and French banks own about EUR8bn of Greek debt between them. It's peanuts.
  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865

    Nick Malkoutzis @NickMalkoutzis

    If gov't pre-referendum predictions right, pro-#Greece initiative from Renzi tomorrow, banks open on Tue & deal reached in 24-48 hrs #euro
    9:03 PM - 5 Jul 2015
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,153
    Scott_P said:

    @JGForsyth: German rhetoric suggests that they are preparing to try and kick Greece out of the Euro http://t.co/Ddb4s0zJMF

    They don't have to do anything. The banks will not open. Greece is shut out of the funding markets. They cannot import food or fuel.

    Greece will pull the trigger themselves and print the Drachma.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,153

    Barnesian said:

    rcs1000 said:

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the economic parameters of a bailout negotiation. The Greeks, many said, benefited from low interest rates and repayments stretched out over many years. Therefore, no debt relief was needed. But, of course, as the IMF now makes clear, if a country has to repay about 4 percent of its income each year over the next 40 years and that country has poor growth prospects precisely because repaying that debt will lower growth, then debt is not sustainable. If this report had been made public earlier, the tone of the public debate and the media’s boorish stereotyping of Greeks and its government would have been balanced by greater clarity on the Greek position."

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    It is easy to break.

    Leave the Eurozone.

    But Greece's government has promised the people there is no need to leave the Eurozone.

    (As an aside, even before the crisis, Greece had the worst ratio of working people to government retirees in the world. In the Euro, outside the Euro, that is not sustainable.)
    They need more immigrants to support their retirees. (Just as we do).
    They currently have 69,000 of them all fresh off boats from North Africa. In fact they have had more migrants in this present crisis than Italy.
    What I want to know is what Libya is going to do when the Greek migrants start arriving on boats...
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Foxinsox, sounds like it from the rhetoric, but it would mark a very significant break from ever closer union.

    Mr. 1000, I agree entirely, just the way you wrote it made it sound like the ratio could work with the euro, but not with the drachma.

    Must admit to being surprised. I thought Yes the likelier winner.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 53,234
    rcs1000 said:

    Scott_P said:

    @JGForsyth: German rhetoric suggests that they are preparing to try and kick Greece out of the Euro http://t.co/Ddb4s0zJMF

    They don't have to do anything. The banks will not open. Greece is shut out of the funding markets. They cannot import food or fuel.

    Greece will pull the trigger themselves and print the Drachma.
    How will they blame it on the Eurozone?
  • FalseFlagFalseFlag Posts: 1,801
    edited July 2015
    rcs1000 said:

    FalseFlag said:

    rcs1000 said:

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mod

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    It is easy to break.

    Leave the Eurozone.

    But Greece's government has promised the people there is no need to leave the Eurozone.

    (As an aside, even before the crisis, Greece had the worst ratio of working people to government retirees in the world. In the Euro, outside the Euro, that is not sustainable.)
    I agree that will be a start. But they will still need a huge cut in debt. And as it stands without leaving the EU they cannot leave the Eurozone.
    Exactly, Greece has carried the burden of propping up the French and German banking systems, the new loans they were given only increased the problem. They have a solvency problem not a liquidity problem, large scale debt forgiveness has always been necessary, it is the EU who have been responsible for this outcome and birthed Syriza.
    Oh pu'lease.

    German and French banks own about EUR8bn of Greek debt between them. It's peanuts.
    I don't think anyone pretends the first bailout wasn't for the French and German banks as well as to prop up the Euro, hence the widespread opposition in the IMF. Of course now ordinary taxpayers have had the liability transferred to them instead and will take the loss
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited July 2015
    Paddy Power a few days ago:

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-07-01/paddy-power-pays-out-early-on-greece-voting-yes-in-referendum

    "Paddy Power Pays Out on Greece Voting ‘Yes’ Four Days Early

    Paddy Power Plc “paid out five figures” in winnings to gamblers who bet that Greece will back a July 5 austerity referendum that may preserve the nation’s future as part of the euro region.
    “Despite some polls suggesting it’s neck and neck, over the last few days we’ve seen enough to be convinced,” Paddy Power, Ireland’s largest bookmaker, said in an e-mail in Dublin on Wednesday. “In a race with two potential outcomes, we’ve seen over 85 percent of money go one way and that’s massive.”"
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Glenn, I'd guess a refusal to recognise the 'sovereign will of the Greek people' or some such silly phrase ;)

    If the eurozone don't negotiate, especially after the quotes coming out already, then the Greek Government will say "We wanted to stay in, but it was impossible with everyone against us. Those nasty eurozone leaders."
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,153

    rcs1000 said:

    Scott_P said:

    @JGForsyth: German rhetoric suggests that they are preparing to try and kick Greece out of the Euro http://t.co/Ddb4s0zJMF

    They don't have to do anything. The banks will not open. Greece is shut out of the funding markets. They cannot import food or fuel.

    Greece will pull the trigger themselves and print the Drachma.
    How will they blame it on the Eurozone?
    "They made us do it. The bastards."
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    Greece needs to make structural reforms if it wants to grow, either within or without the EZ, or for that matter the EU.

    Corruption, a feather bedded civil service, an expensive military, an inflexible labour force, a low fertility rate and an unwillingness to pay or collect taxes are the obstacles to economic growth.
    As is membership of the Euro for them. Of course you miss that one out.

    If Greece had not been in the Eurozone then although they would still have been in trouble it would have been no where near as serious. And remember much - the vast majority in fact - of the current debt was not built up under the current radical Socialist government but under the previous pro EU, IMF compliant centre left and centre right governments. Even jumping through every hoop demanded of them they still couldn't make it work because basically the EU and IMF demands were unachievable.
    Membership of the Euro would not have been a problem if they had solved the problems that I listed. Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.

    The lesson is this: if you want the stability of a North European currency then you cannot evade the discipline required.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    I was expecting the exit poll to be wrong —but in the opposite direction, (as were a few other people on PB).
  • GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071
    AndyJS said:

    Paddy Power a few days ago:

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-07-01/paddy-power-pays-out-early-on-greece-voting-yes-in-referendum

    "Paddy Power Pays Out on Greece Voting ‘Yes’ Four Days Early

    Paddy Power Plc “paid out five figures” in winnings to gamblers who bet that Greece will back a July 5 austerity referendum that may preserve the nation’s future as part of the euro region.
    “Despite some polls suggesting it’s neck and neck, over the last few days we’ve seen enough to be convinced,” Paddy Power, Ireland’s largest bookmaker, said in an e-mail in Dublin on Wednesday. “In a race with two potential outcomes, we’ve seen over 85 percent of money go one way and that’s massive.”"

    You'd have to have a heart of stone etc etc
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,153
    It's amazing to think that in 1996, government debt to GDP was 50% higher in Belgium than in Greece.

    It's not that way now...
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,153

    Mr. Glenn, I'd guess a refusal to recognise the 'sovereign will of the Greek people' or some such silly phrase ;)

    If the eurozone don't negotiate, especially after the quotes coming out already, then the Greek Government will say "We wanted to stay in, but it was impossible with everyone against us. Those nasty eurozone leaders."

    Time is not on Greece's side. Every day the banks don't open; every day that Greece cannot import food or fuel; every day the vital tourist industry is affected... puts enormous pressure on the Greek government.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    The closest result so far is in Lakonias district where No currently has 51.42%.

    Is that a wealthy district of Athens by any chance?

    http://ekloges.ypes.gr/current/e/public/index.html?lang=en#{"cls":"eps","params":{}}
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Martin Selmayr retweeted
    Hugo Dixon ‏@Hugodixon 58m58 minutes ago Hellas
    Great tragedy of Greek referendum is that many of those who voted NO probably don't realise what is about to hit them

    Martin Selmayr is Jean-Claude Juncker's head of cabinet.
  • watford30watford30 Posts: 3,474
    edited July 2015

    Mr. Glenn, I'd guess a refusal to recognise the 'sovereign will of the Greek people' or some such silly phrase ;)

    If the eurozone don't negotiate, especially after the quotes coming out already, then the Greek Government will say "We wanted to stay in, but it was impossible with everyone against us. Those nasty eurozone leaders."

    EU will boot them out, as a message to any other countries tempted to rock the boat.
  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865
    Yanis Varoufakis the Greek finance minister has said in a brief televised statement:

    “The Greek people have said No to five years of hypocrisy.

    “For five months we negotiated for our logical, reasonable argument to be heard. No new loans if we cannot restructure the previous non-viable loans.

    “No to new cuts for poorer people… The goal of our government was to stop the recession and restructure the debt. Unfortunately during these five months, our counterparts in Europe denied a negotation and from the first moment they planned to close our banks and to humiliate us … for criticising their failing bailout agreements.”

    “Today the Greek people returned their take or leave it ultimatum.”

    “The IMF to its credit said that the debt is not viable.”

    “We have to face the European Commission to find a solution to make things better. The heart of Europe beats in Greece.”

    “Today’s No is a Yes to a democratic Europe… “
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    antifrank said:

    Martin Selmayr retweeted
    Hugo Dixon ‏@Hugodixon 58m58 minutes ago Hellas
    Great tragedy of Greek referendum is that many of those who voted NO probably don't realise what is about to hit them

    Martin Selmayr is Jean-Claude Juncker's head of cabinet.

    Wow. Doesn't sound good for Syrizia.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 32,739

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    Greece needs to make structural reforms if it wants to grow, either within or without the EZ, or for that matter the EU.

    Corruption, a feather bedded civil service, an expensive military, an inflexible labour force, a low fertility rate and an unwillingness to pay or collect taxes are the obstacles to economic growth.
    As is membership of the Euro for them. Of course you miss that one out.

    If Greece had not been in the Eurozone then although they would still have been in trouble it would have been no where near as serious. And remember much - the vast majority in fact - of the current debt was not built up under the current radical Socialist government but under the previous pro EU, IMF compliant centre left and centre right governments. Even jumping through every hoop demanded of them they still couldn't make it work because basically the EU and IMF demands were unachievable.
    Membership of the Euro would not have been a problem if they had solved the problems that I listed. Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.

    The lesson is this: if you want the stability of a North European currency then you cannot evade the discipline required.
    Avoiding answering the rest of my point I see.

    And they should never have been allowed into the Euro in the first place. Again that is a decision that in large part lies with the EU who were desperate for every EU country to be in the single currency as part of the move towards statehood.
  • frpenkridgefrpenkridge Posts: 670
    All this politics and economics is complicated, isn't it? Those people who study PPE must be very clever.
  • DisraeliDisraeli Posts: 1,106
    edited July 2015
    While we have all be focussed on Greece (understandably)

    UNITE BACKS CORBYN

    "Britain's biggest trade union Unite is backing veteran left-winger Jeremy Corbyn as Labour leader.

    The union's executive committee voted to lend its support to Mr Corbyn, with Andy Burnham as its second preference."

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-33402438
  • AndyJS said:

    The closest result so far is in Lakonias district where No currently has 51.42%.

    Is that a wealthy district of Athens by any chance?

    http://ekloges.ypes.gr/current/e/public/index.html?lang=en#{"cls":"eps","params":{}}

    Laconia is the district that contains Sparta. It gives its name to laconic wit.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,844
    The polls were so wrong!

    I know we are not supposed to question the integrity of polling organisations on PB but ....?
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395

    AndyJS said:

    The closest result so far is in Lakonias district where No currently has 51.42%.

    Is that a wealthy district of Athens by any chance?

    http://ekloges.ypes.gr/current/e/public/index.html?lang=en#{"cls":"eps","params":{}}

    Laconia is the district that contains Sparta. It gives its name to laconic wit.
    Any reason why the Yes vote would be higher there than elsewhere?
  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865
    Very slim victory for the No vote. They must be very disappointed with these results I guess.

    Jakub Krupa @JakubKrupaFE
    With 84.9% of votes counted:

    OXI/NO 61.5%
    NAI/YES 38.5%

    #PulsGrecji #Greferendum
  • watford30watford30 Posts: 3,474
    edited July 2015

    antifrank said:

    Martin Selmayr retweeted
    Hugo Dixon ‏@Hugodixon 58m58 minutes ago Hellas
    Great tragedy of Greek referendum is that many of those who voted NO probably don't realise what is about to hit them

    Martin Selmayr is Jean-Claude Juncker's head of cabinet.

    Wow. Doesn't sound good for Syrizia.
    Wait until the crowds stop cheering and get angry when what was promised isn't delivered.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 29,480
    Commenting on twitter about something like this totally unprofessional.
  • ReprobatusReprobatus Posts: 27
    DICIGC – Drachma is Crap is Greek Currency :smiley:
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    Greece needs to make structural reforms if it wants to grow, either within or without the EZ, or for that matter the EU.

    Corruption, a feather bedded civil service, an expensive military, an inflexible labour force, a low fertility rate and an unwillingness to pay or collect taxes are the obstacles to economic growth.
    As is membership of the Euro for them. Of course you miss that one out.

    If Greece had not been in the Eurozone then although they would still have been in trouble it would have been no where near as serious. And remember much - the vast majority in fact - of the current debt was not built up under the current radical Socialist government but under the previous pro EU, IMF compliant centre left and centre right governments. Even jumping through every hoop demanded of them they still couldn't make it work because basically the EU and IMF demands were unachievable.
    Membership of the Euro would not have been a problem if they had solved the problems that I listed. Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.

    The lesson is this: if you want the stability of a North European currency then you cannot evade the discipline required.
    The problem is that even if you improve competitiveness, unless you are better than the median member of a shared currency, you're going to have an overvalued currency, and you are going to be on the raw end of the divergence sooner or later. This is what Germany doesn't appreciate: not everyone can replicate their performance because not everyone can have an undervalued currency.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. 1983 to whom are you referring?
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    Greece needs to make structural reforms if it wants to grow, either within or without the EZ, or for that matter the EU.

    Corruption, a feather bedded civil service, an expensive military, an inflexible labour force, a low fertility rate and an unwillingness to pay or collect taxes are the obstacles to economic growth.
    As is membership of the Euro for them. Of course you miss that one out.

    If Greece had not been in
    Membership of the Euro would not have been a problem if they had solved the problems that I listed. Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.

    The lesson is this: if you want the stability of a North European currency then you cannot evade the discipline required.
    Avoiding answering the rest of my point I see.

    And they should never have been allowed into the Euro in the first place. Again that is a decision that in large part lies with the EU who were desperate for every EU country to be in the single currency as part of the move towards statehood.
    I agree that Greece should only have joined the Euro after it had sorted out its economy; but it could have worked if it had reformed its economy concurrently.

    I have made over 8000 posts and you will not find one where I have advocated either the UK or any other country joining the Euro. Having joined though they are obliged to follow the rules.

    You are very tiresome in the way you misrepresent my views.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739
    So is this the most stunning act of Greek resistance since Thermoplyae?
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @StigAbell: Now that Greece has voted "against austerity", presumably the next move is just to sit back and watch the money start flowing. #Greferendum
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 29,480
    watford30 said:

    antifrank said:

    Martin Selmayr retweeted
    Hugo Dixon ‏@Hugodixon 58m58 minutes ago Hellas
    Great tragedy of Greek referendum is that many of those who voted NO probably don't realise what is about to hit them

    Martin Selmayr is Jean-Claude Juncker's head of cabinet.

    Wow. Doesn't sound good for Syrizia.
    Wait until the crowds stop cheering and get angry when what was promised isn't delivered.
    Nothing was promised. The only certainty was what would happen if they voted Yes.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Eagles, Thermopylae was noble and glorious. And the Greeks lost.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 29,480

    Mr. 1983 to whom are you referring?

    Sorry, that cabinet person.

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 52,529


    If Greece had not been in the Eurozone then although they would still have been in trouble it would have been no where near as serious. And remember much - the vast majority in fact - of the current debt was not built up under the current radical Socialist government but under the previous pro EU, IMF compliant centre left and centre right governments. Even jumping through every hoop demanded of them they still couldn't make it work because basically the EU and IMF demands were unachievable.

    The reason that the Greek debt is so unsupportable and the economy shrank by 25% was that it was inflated by spending funded by cheap borrowing. When the money stopped, the balloon collapsed.

    If Greece hadn't been in the Euro, 15% interest rates on government borrowing would have stopped the party much earlier.

    Of course, we would have the Guardian running articles telling us that 15% interest rates on Greek government bonds was an attack on their sovereign right to borrow....
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. 1983, you may have a point, though he isn't the only public figure saying less than complimentary things about Greece right now.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    So is this the most stunning act of Greek resistance since Thermoplyae?

    The best victory since the battle of Asculum?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739

    Mr. Eagles, Thermopylae was noble and glorious. And the Greeks lost.

    Yeah, but the Greeks won the Greco-Persian war.

    As I keep on telling you about Hannibal, winning the odd battle here and there doesn't mean much if you lose the war.
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469
    edited July 2015

    This is the view of the former IMF bail out chief Ashoka Mody

    "As an international organization responsible for global financial stability, it is the IMF’s role to explain clearly and honestly the

    Those defending the IMF and EU in the way they have handled Greece should perhaps read this.

    http://www.bruegel.org/nc/blog/detail/article/1669-in-bad-faith/

    We are currently paying 7% of govt spending on interest, equivalent to 3% of GDP. Is that extra 1% for a debt burden twice the percentage share of GDP really unreasonable?

    UK debt expenditure sourced here:

    http://www.ukpublicspending.co.uk/piechart_2015_UK_total

    And if Greek debt is intolerable then is it not wise for Greece to live within its means?
    It is unreasonable when the result of the debt repayments is to shrink your economy. The amount being asked for is equivalent to 10% of government spending each year - at a time when the Greek economy has already shrunk by 25%.. It is a debt deflation cycle that is unbreakable without external help.
    Greece needs to make structural reforms if it wants to grow, either within or without the EZ, or for that matter the EU.

    Corruption, a feather bedded civil service, an expensive military, an inflexible labour force, a low fertility rate and an unwillingness to pay or collect taxes are the obstacles to economic growth.</ </p>
    Membership of the Euro would not have been a problem if they had solved the problems that I listed. Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.

    The lesson is this: if you want the stability of a North European currency then you cannot evade the discipline required.
    Avoiding answering the rest of my point I see.

    And they should never have been allowed into the Euro in the first place. Again that is a decision that in large part lies with the EU who were desperate for every EU country to be in the single currency as part of the move towards statehood.
    Er! When will we see executives from Goldman Sachs in prison?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739

    So is this the most stunning act of Greek resistance since Thermoplyae?

    The best victory since the battle of Asculum?
    Ah, a Pyrrhic victory
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Not to be lost in the Santorini-style explosion taking place in Greece tonight, some British fiscal news:

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/cb821058-2317-11e5-9c4e-a775d2b173ca.html?siteedition=uk#axzz3f3HMbrLY

    "the chancellor is enjoying some good fiscal news, with economists saying he is likely to have up to £15bn more leeway on the public finances than expected three months ago."
  • GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071
    Barnesian said:

    The polls were so wrong!

    I know we are not supposed to question the integrity of polling organisations on PB but ....?

    I think that only applies to UK accredited ones as PB wants to protect relationships, embargoed early access etc.

    The Greek based ones will be out of business by the end of the week so we can say what we like about their crapness I guess. What are they going to do about it, eh?
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Ah, a Pyrrhic victory

    @alstewitn: #greekreferendum #haiku
    'Pyrrhic' victory
    is Greek, by derivation;
    'ironic', latin.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Eagles, and Mr. Foxinsox, Pyrrhus was an Epirot.

    Mr. Eagles, winning the war is leaving the eurozone. Which the Greeks don't want to do.
  • MyBurningEarsMyBurningEars Posts: 3,651
    edited July 2015
    Time for some Dick Tuck (what an awesome name the man had) pedantry: the phrase is actually "The people have spoken, the bastards." No voters or voting. But he also came up with, while behind in the count, "Just wait till the dead vote comes in."

    Legendary guy. Even if you disbelieve his alleged role in the Nixon pranks. And quite a life - he was in Robert Kennedy's ambulance after he was shot.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Tuck
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @jimwaterson: British political types celebrating a Greek no vote: SNP supporters, Nigel Farage, Labour's hard left, Nick Griffin.

    @JournoStephen: Of course, it would be wrong to tar all those parties with the same brush just because they were on the same side of a referendum.
  • MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    Beware of Greeks bearing gilts.

  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Mr. Eagles, and Mr. Foxinsox, Pyrrhus was an Epirot.

    Mr. Eagles, winning the war is leaving the eurozone. Which the Greeks don't want to do.

    Greeks argue that Epirus is part of Greece...
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 32,739



    I agree that Greece should only have joined the Euro after it had sorted out its economy; but it could have worked if it had reformed its economy concurrently.

    I have made over 8000 posts and you will not find one where I have advocated either the UK or any other country joining the Euro. Having joined though they are obliged to follow the rules.

    You are very tiresome in the way you misrepresent my views.

    I misrepresent nothing. You consistently make posts trying to excuse the behaviour of the EU and pretend that all the blame lies with the Greeks alone. You consistently try to deflect attention from the basic fundamental issues of a single currency without a single state and attack Eurosceptics when they make that contention - the same contention we have made for the last 2 decades and which people like you have consistently denied.

    The famous phrase we used when Eurofanatics - chief amongst them the party you still support - were trying to push us into the Single Currency saying it was inevitable was:

    "Everyone said the Titanic would set sail and they were right. It still didn't make it a good idea to be on board."

    Unfortunately Greece are the Third Class Steerage passengers locked below decks.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739

    Mr. Eagles, and Mr. Foxinsox, Pyrrhus was an Epirot.

    Mr. Eagles, winning the war is leaving the eurozone. Which the Greeks don't want to do.

    Winning the war is making the Germans work until they are 70 so they can pay the Greeks to retire at 55
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 53,234

    watford30 said:

    antifrank said:

    Martin Selmayr retweeted
    Hugo Dixon ‏@Hugodixon 58m58 minutes ago Hellas
    Great tragedy of Greek referendum is that many of those who voted NO probably don't realise what is about to hit them

    Martin Selmayr is Jean-Claude Juncker's head of cabinet.

    Wow. Doesn't sound good for Syrizia.
    Wait until the crowds stop cheering and get angry when what was promised isn't delivered.
    Nothing was promised. The only certainty was what would happen if they voted Yes.
    Tsipras promised again and again that it wasn't a vote against being in the Euro. If it emerges that he was printing Drachma all along I wouldn't want to be in his shoes.

    I'm sure Tsipras and Varoufakis have a plan which will have dramatic consequences but I don't think it will in any way resemble what might look like the obvious solution.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Foxinsox, Greeks sometimes also argue Alexander the Great was Greek. They're wrong, twice over.
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656



    I agree that Greece should only have joined the Euro after it had sorted out its economy; but it could have worked if it had reformed its economy concurrently.

    I have made over 8000 posts and you will not find one where I have advocated either the UK or any other country joining the Euro. Having joined though they are obliged to follow the rules.

    You are very tiresome in the way you misrepresent my views.

    I misrepresent nothing. You consistently make posts trying to excuse the behaviour of the EU and pretend that all the blame lies with the Greeks alone. You consistently try to deflect attention from the basic fundamental issues of a single currency without a single state and attack Eurosceptics when they make that contention - the same contention we have made for the last 2 decades and which people like you have consistently denied.

    The famous phrase we used when Eurofanatics - chief amongst them the party you still support - were trying to push us into the Single Currency saying it was inevitable was:

    "Everyone said the Titanic would set sail and they were right. It still didn't make it a good idea to be on board."

    Unfortunately Greece are the Third Class Steerage passengers locked below decks.
    While I agree with your point, that never happened outside of Hollywood dramatisation. Locking people below deck on a sinking ship would have led to murder charges.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,136
    Mr. Eagles, vielleicht.

    Would you rather be in Germany or Greece's shoes?
  • GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071

    Mr. 1983, you may have a point, though he isn't the only public figure saying less than complimentary things about Greece right now.

    Sort of. He's retweeted something rather than actually saying anything himself.
    So you can only infer implied agreement.
    Maybe a small distinction - but a distinction nevertheless.
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469
    And can I ask, which party in Greece dropped the country in the deep doodah originally? It couldn't have been a right wing one? Of course not. They have a reputation of being honest, trustworthy governance, much like our own.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 29,480
    Can I just say, hark at some in this thread who have all these pithy words of wisdom for Greece: 'Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.' Yet are these same people not anti-austerity Labour voters advocating more deficit-funded public spending for the UK? Strange how they seem quite prepared to advocate hair shirts and slashed public sector pensions for other countries.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,739
    edited July 2015

    Mr. Eagles, vielleicht.

    Would you rather be in Germany or Greece's shoes?

    Germany's shoes.

    The Greeks, not them, are close to not having a pot to piss in.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,035
    edited July 2015

    Commenting on twitter about something like this totally unprofessional.

    Eh, it's what people do nowadays. Cabinet reshuffles, policy announcements, bitter comments about rivals. The new professionalism I guess.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 29,480

    watford30 said:

    antifrank said:

    Martin Selmayr retweeted
    Hugo Dixon ‏@Hugodixon 58m58 minutes ago Hellas
    Great tragedy of Greek referendum is that many of those who voted NO probably don't realise what is about to hit them

    Martin Selmayr is Jean-Claude Juncker's head of cabinet.

    Wow. Doesn't sound good for Syrizia.
    Wait until the crowds stop cheering and get angry when what was promised isn't delivered.
    Nothing was promised. The only certainty was what would happen if they voted Yes.
    Tsipras promised again and again that it wasn't a vote against being in the Euro. If it emerges that he was printing Drachma all along I wouldn't want to be in his shoes.

    I'm sure Tsipras and Varoufakis have a plan which will have dramatic consequences but I don't think it will in any way resemble what might look like the obvious solution.
    But there is no legal mechanism for a country to leave the euro, so they weren't wrong.

  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548



    I agree that Greece should only have joined the Euro after it had sorted out its economy; but it could have worked if it had reformed its economy concurrently.

    I have made over 8000 posts and you will not find one where I have advocated either the UK or any other country joining the Euro. Having joined though they are obliged to follow the rules.

    You are very tiresome in the way you misrepresent my views.

    I misrepresent nothing. You consistently make posts trying to excuse the behaviour of the EU and pretend that all the blame lies with the Greeks alone. You consistently try to deflect attention from the basic fundamental issues of a single currency without a single state and attack Eurosceptics when they make that contention - the same contention we have made for the last 2 decades and which people like you have consistently denied.

    The famous phrase we used when Eurofanatics - chief amongst them the party you still support - were trying to push us into the Single Currency saying it was inevitable was:

    "Everyone said the Titanic would set sail and they were right. It still didn't make it a good idea to be on board."

    Unfortunately Greece are the Third Class Steerage passengers locked below decks.
    Can you link to a single post where I have denied that currency union requires political union?

    If not then you misrepresent my views.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 29,480
    kle4 said:

    Commenting on twitter about something like this totally unprofessional.

    Eh, it's what people do nowadays. Cabinet reshuffles, policy announcements, bitter comments about rivals. The new professionalism I guess.
    Yes, I know, and it's beneath contempt.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,817
    Do countries have shoes?

    Italy is one of course.

    Am I missing the point here?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,035
    OchEye said:

    And can I ask, which party in Greece dropped the country in the deep doodah originally? It couldn't have been a right wing one? Of course not. They have a reputation of being honest, trustworthy governance, much like our own.

    Certainly the attempt to blame the Greek mess on lefty thinking alone would be unfair, though pending a great deal off the back of this referendum win, the current lot will have made things even worse. If they can get a better deal, then apparently the 'politics of the student union' as has been commented many times among the commentariat, will have been more effective than I had realised.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,236
    OchEye said:

    And can I ask, which party in Greece dropped the country in the deep doodah originally? It couldn't have been a right wing one? Of course not. They have a reputation of being honest, trustworthy governance, much like our own.

    Right and left wing are pretty much meaningless concepts, especially when comparing countries. For instance compare the so-called left-wing Democratic Party in the US with the so-called left-wing Labour Party in the UK.
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469
    kle4 said:

    OchEye said:

    And can I ask, which party in Greece dropped the country in the deep doodah originally? It couldn't have been a right wing one? Of course not. They have a reputation of being honest, trustworthy governance, much like our own.

    Certainly the attempt to blame the Greek mess on lefty thinking alone would be unfair, though pending a great deal off the back of this referendum win, the current lot will have made things even worse. If they can get a better deal, then apparently the 'politics of the student union' as has been commented many times among the commentariat, will have been more effective than I had realised.
    Sorry, but you dodged the question, but I'm generous, how about another try at answering?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 52,529
    kle4 said:

    OchEye said:

    And can I ask, which party in Greece dropped the country in the deep doodah originally? It couldn't have been a right wing one? Of course not. They have a reputation of being honest, trustworthy governance, much like our own.

    Certainly the attempt to blame the Greek mess on lefty thinking alone would be unfair, though pending a great deal off the back of this referendum win, the current lot will have made things even worse. If they can get a better deal, then apparently the 'politics of the student union' as has been commented many times among the commentariat, will have been more effective than I had realised.
    It was all parties of left and right. A very small number of people called for reform, end of tax evasion etc. They were repeatedly howled down. In one case, a Greek economics professor was hounded from his job at Athens University after he publicly denounced the system by which the government bought votes with unfunded pension increases and other social measures. The response from left and right to the death threats (serious ones) was that he deserved them.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Can I just say, hark at some in this thread who have all these pithy words of wisdom for Greece: 'Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.' Yet are these same people not anti-austerity Labour voters advocating more deficit-funded public spending for the UK? Strange how they seem quite prepared to advocate hair shirts and slashed public sector pensions for other countries.

    Those are my words, and I have consistently argued for sound money and a balanced budget. I am not an "anti-austerity Labour voter"; I am a LibDem, of the Orange Book variety.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 53,234

    watford30 said:

    antifrank said:

    Martin Selmayr retweeted
    Hugo Dixon ‏@Hugodixon 58m58 minutes ago Hellas
    Great tragedy of Greek referendum is that many of those who voted NO probably don't realise what is about to hit them

    Martin Selmayr is Jean-Claude Juncker's head of cabinet.

    Wow. Doesn't sound good for Syrizia.
    Wait until the crowds stop cheering and get angry when what was promised isn't delivered.
    Nothing was promised. The only certainty was what would happen if they voted Yes.
    Tsipras promised again and again that it wasn't a vote against being in the Euro. If it emerges that he was printing Drachma all along I wouldn't want to be in his shoes.

    I'm sure Tsipras and Varoufakis have a plan which will have dramatic consequences but I don't think it will in any way resemble what might look like the obvious solution.
    But there is no legal mechanism for a country to leave the euro, so they weren't wrong.

    As many people have pointed out, that is meaningless given the practical requirement to have a currency you can use.

    Syriza will need to act fast and if their solution is to unveil a new Drachma in short order it will be the biggest betrayal of the electorate imaginable, yet if they prevaricate the chances of civil society breaking down are high.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 97,035

    watford30 said:

    antifrank said:

    Martin Selmayr retweeted
    Hugo Dixon ‏@Hugodixon 58m58 minutes ago Hellas
    Great tragedy of Greek referendum is that many of those who voted NO probably don't realise what is about to hit them

    Martin Selmayr is Jean-Claude Juncker's head of cabinet.

    Wow. Doesn't sound good for Syrizia.
    Wait until the crowds stop cheering and get angry when what was promised isn't delivered.
    Nothing was promised. The only certainty was what would happen if they voted Yes.
    Tsipras promised again and again that it wasn't a vote against being in the Euro. If it emerges that he was printing Drachma all along I wouldn't want to be in his shoes.

    I'm sure Tsipras and Varoufakis have a plan which will have dramatic consequences but I don't think it will in any way resemble what might look like the obvious solution.
    But there is no legal mechanism for a country to leave the euro, so they weren't wrong.

    De facto is as de facto does. They can argue technicalities and legalities all they like, if it transpires Greece can in effect be forced out somehow, that have to deal with the consequences of that. Conversely, the other side have some explaining to do about the claims this was a vote on the Euro if it turns out Greece will keep using it, and acting as if they suddenly realised they had no legal means to enforce that won't cut it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,127

    Time for some Dick Tuck (what an awesome name the man had) pedantry: the phrase is actually "The people have spoken, the bastards." No voters or voting. But he also came up with, while behind in the count, "Just wait till the dead vote comes in."

    Legendary guy. Even if you disbelieve his alleged role in the Nixon pranks. And quite a life - he was in Robert Kennedy's ambulance after he was shot.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Tuck

    Correction noted, sounds he had quite a life!
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    edited July 2015
    OchEye said:

    And can I ask, which party in Greece dropped the country in the deep doodah originally? It couldn't have been a right wing one? Of course not. They have a reputation of being honest, trustworthy governance, much like our own.

    Sadly, supposedly conservative parties on the continent have been as blindly Europhile as socialist ones. They could take a few lessons from British conservatism, but they refuse to learn no matter how many bad results the EU gets. We have one last chance to persuade them that ever closer union is a mistake and greater flexibility is the way to go. Let us see how they listen.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    kle4 said:

    Commenting on twitter about something like this totally unprofessional.

    Eh, it's what people do nowadays. Cabinet reshuffles, policy announcements, bitter comments about rivals. The new professionalism I guess.
    Yes, I know, and it's beneath contempt.
    Tweeting is at least more honest than unattributable press briefings, which have been the staple of politics for over a century.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 125,127
    OchEye said:

    And can I ask, which party in Greece dropped the country in the deep doodah originally? It couldn't have been a right wing one? Of course not. They have a reputation of being honest, trustworthy governance, much like our own.

    Right and Left were responsible but under Samaras Greece was at least beginning to recover, it achieved a primary government surplus in 2013, returned to growth in the second quarter of 2014 and was the fastest growing economy in the eurozone in the third quarter
  • OchEyeOchEye Posts: 1,469

    Can I just say, hark at some in this thread who have all these pithy words of wisdom for Greece: 'Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.' Yet are these same people not anti-austerity Labour voters advocating more deficit-funded public spending for the UK? Strange how they seem quite prepared to advocate hair shirts and slashed public sector pensions for other countries.

    Those are my words, and I have consistently argued for sound money and a balanced budget. I am not an "anti-austerity Labour voter"; I am a LibDem, of the Orange Book variety.
    Dearly beloved, we are gathered here for the funeral of the Orange Book believers...... ROFLMAO!
  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865
    Well the difference between the Greeks and the Germans is not that much really... Oh?

    Viktoria Dendrinou @v_dendrinou
    Greek PM Tsipras says tonight's result is not a mandate for rupture with Europe, but one for a strengthened negotiating position for Greece
    9:37 PM - 5 Jul 2015 · Greece, Hellas


    Jeanette Minns AN HOUR AGO
    Angela Merkel reported to have said to her party that Alexis Tsipras has effectively “slammed his party into a wall,” according to a BBC report. “Europe is strong, it can withstand something like this.”


  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656

    Can I just say, hark at some in this thread who have all these pithy words of wisdom for Greece: 'Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.' Yet are these same people not anti-austerity Labour voters advocating more deficit-funded public spending for the UK? Strange how they seem quite prepared to advocate hair shirts and slashed public sector pensions for other countries.

    Those are my words, and I have consistently argued for sound money and a balanced budget. I am not an "anti-austerity Labour voter"; I am a LibDem, of the Orange Book variety.
    Supporting sound money is inconsistent with supporting the single currency. Supporting more centralization to Brussels is inconsistent with supporting liberal democracy.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    OchEye said:

    Can I just say, hark at some in this thread who have all these pithy words of wisdom for Greece: 'Instead they used the cheap money to run up debts and have a party.' Yet are these same people not anti-austerity Labour voters advocating more deficit-funded public spending for the UK? Strange how they seem quite prepared to advocate hair shirts and slashed public sector pensions for other countries.

    Those are my words, and I have consistently argued for sound money and a balanced budget. I am not an "anti-austerity Labour voter"; I am a LibDem, of the Orange Book variety.
    Dearly beloved, we are gathered here for the funeral of the Orange Book believers...... ROFLMAO!
    To be resurrected shortly...
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @NinaDSchick: Luxembourg's Foreign Minister Asselborn on @ZDF: It's impossible for ECB to allow a haircut on #Greek debt. #Greece https://t.co/W6I6PztIZn
  • notmenotme Posts: 3,293
    antifrank said:

    Not to be lost in the Santorini-style explosion taking place in Greece tonight, some British fiscal news:

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/cb821058-2317-11e5-9c4e-a775d2b173ca.html?siteedition=uk#axzz3f3HMbrLY

    "the chancellor is enjoying some good fiscal news, with economists saying he is likely to have up to £15bn more leeway on the public finances than expected three months ago."

    We have seen the government repeatedly, and rather impressively, let labour bash on and on about some impending doom, and then doing something different.

    At any point, including the PMQs the day before, they could have pointed out that maybe the child poverty figures wouldnt be as bad as everyone expected, while under repeated attack by harriet harman (and believe me, large grunts of pre-orgasmic delight by the poverty mongerors expected it to be really bad), but no, they kept stum.

    Is the big lather than labour are getting themselves into over child tax credits another one of these? And we find that he only trims round the edges.

    I see a former labour ppc in my region is calling the removal of rent subsidy to people on £30k upwards as a 'middle class bedroom tax'.

    Oh dear.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,844

    Mr. Eagles, and Mr. Foxinsox, Pyrrhus was an Epirot.

    Mr. Eagles, winning the war is leaving the eurozone. Which the Greeks don't want to do.

    Winning the war is making the Germans work until they are 70 so they can pay the Greeks to retire at 55
    According to the OECD, the effective age of men retiring in Germany is 62.1 and in Greece it is 61.9. Not a lot of difference in spite of all the misinformation in recent weeks.

    http://www.oecd.org/els/emp/ageingandemploymentpolicies-statisticsonaverageeffectiveageofretirement.htm


  • GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071

    kle4 said:

    Commenting on twitter about something like this totally unprofessional.

    Eh, it's what people do nowadays. Cabinet reshuffles, policy announcements, bitter comments about rivals. The new professionalism I guess.
    Yes, I know, and it's beneath contempt.
    The current all-too-public Danczuk breakup is a particularly nasty topical example.
This discussion has been closed.