NOVANEWS |
By Ellen BrownGlobal Research |
![]() The crushing Greek debt could be canceled the way it was made by sleight of hand. But saving the Greek people and their economy is evidently not in the game plan of the Eurocrats. Greeces creditors have finally brought the country to its knees, forcing President Alexis Tsipras to agree to austerity and privatization measures more severe than those overwhelmingly rejected by popular vote a week earlier. No write-down of Greeces debt was included in the deal, although the IMF has warned that the current debt is unsustainable.
According to a July 5th article titled Greece The One Biggest Lie Youre Being Told By The Media, the country did not fail on its own. It was made to fail:
A Truth Committee convened by the Greek parliament reported in June that a major portion of the countrys 320 billion euros debt is illegal, illegitimate and odious and should not be paid.
That is how it works for Germany after World War II. According to economist Michael Hudson, the most successful debt jubilee in recent times was gifted to Germany, the country now most opposed to doing the same for Greece. The German Economic Miracle followed massive debt forgiveness by the Allies:
Why not do the same for the Greeks? Hudson writes:
Loans Created with Accounting Entries Can Be Canceled with Accounting Entries
The Real Roadblock Is Political
Prof. Richard Werner, who was on the scene as the European Union evolved,maintains that the intent for the EU from the start was the abandonment of national sovereignty in favor of a single-currency system controlled by eurocrats doing the bidding of international financiers. The model was flawed from the beginning. The solution, he says, is for EU countries to regain their national sovereignty by leaving the euro en masse. He writes:
But Dr. Werner acknowledges that this is not likely to happen soon. Brussels has been instructed by President Obama, no doubt instructed by Wall Street, to hold the euro together at all costs. The Promise and Perils of Grexit The creditors may have won this round, but Greeces financial woes are far from resolved. After the next financial crisis, it could still find itself out of the EU. If the Greek parliament fails to endorse the deal just agreed to by its president, Grexit could happen even earlier. And that could be the Black Swan event that ultimately breaks up the EU. It might be in the interests of the creditors to consider a debt jubilee to avoid that result, just as the Allies felt it was in their interests to expunge German debts after World War II. For Greece, leaving the EU may be perilous; but it opens provocative possibilities. The government could nationalize its insolvent banks along with its central bank, and start generating the credit the country desperately needs to get back on its feet. If it chose, it could do this while still using the euro, just as Ecuador uses the US dollar without being part of the US. (For more on how this could work, see here.) If Greece switches to drachmas, the funding possibilities are even greater. It could generate the money for a national dividend, guaranteed employment for all, expanded social services, and widespread investment in infrastructure, clean energy, and local business. Freed from its Eurocrat oppressors, Greece could model for the world what can be achieved by a sovereign country using publicly-owned banks and publicly-issued currency for the benefit of its own economy and its own people. |