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OpEdNews Op Eds    H2'ed 2/19/15

Ironman Varoufakis's Revolutionary Plan for Europe (Don't Tell Anyone in Berlin)

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If you look at the way that Varoufakis has handled the Eurogroup, you have to admire the subtlety, but effectiveness of his strategy. In any battle, one must draw attention to the righteousness of their cause while exposing the flaws in the character of their adversary. The incident on Monday certainly achieved both. While David never really slayed Goliath, Goliath is certainly in retreat. And that's a lot better than anyone expected.

As for the "cause," well, that speaks for itself. The Greek bailout was never reasonable because the plan wasn't designed to create a path for Greece to grow its way out of debt and deflation. No. It was basically a public relations smokescreen used to conceal what was really going on behind the scenes, which was a massive giveaway to the banks and bondholders. Everyone knows this. Check this out from Naked Capitalism:

"According to the Jubilee Debt Campaign, 92% of 240 billion Greece has received since the May 2010 bailout went to Greek and European financial institutions." (Naked Capitalism)

Yep, it was all just one big welfare payment to the moocher class. Meanwhile, the Greeks got zilch. And, yet, the Eurogroup wants them to continue with this same program?

No thanks.

As far as Greece's finances are concerned, they've gotten progressively worse every year the bailout has dragged on. For example, Greece's debt-to-GDP ratio has gone from 115 percent in 2010 more than 170 percent today. The country is headed in the wrong direction, which is what makes Varoufakis's remedies so compelling. It's because everyone knows that "if you are already in a hole, stop digging." That's the logic behind Varoufakis's position; he simply wants to "stop digging." But that can't be done by borrowing more money to repay debts that only get bigger with each new bailout. And it can't be done by implementing excruciating belt-tightening measures that increase unemployment and shrink the economy. It can only be done by reducing one's debts and initiating programs that help to grow the economy back to health.

This isn't rocket science, but it is anathema to the retrograde ideology of the European Union which is one part bonehead economics and one part German sanctimony. Put the two together and you come up with a pre-Keynesian dystopia where one of the wealthiest regions in the world inches ever-closer to anarchy and ruin for the sole purpose of proving that contractionary expansion actually works. Well, guess what? It doesn't, and we now have six years of evidence to prove it.

It's worth noting that the Eurogroup hasn't budged one inch from its original position. In other words, there really haven't been any negotiations, not in any meaningful sense of the word. What there has been is one group of pompous blowhards reiterating the same discredited mantra over and over again, even though austerity has been thoroughly denounced by every reputable economist on the planet.

Of course that doesn't matter to the ex-Goldman swindlers at the ECB or their hairshirt counterparts in Berlin. What they want is to extract every last drop of blood from their Greek victims. That's their game. And, of course, ultimately what they want to do is annihilate the entire EU welfare state; crush the unions, eviscerate pensions, wages and health care, and privatize everything they can get their greasy hands on. That's the real objective. Greece's exorbitant debts are just a means to an end, just a way to decimate the middle class in one fell swoop.

Keep in mind, the EU just narrowly avoided a triple-dip recession in the third quarter, which would have been their third slump in less than six years. How do you like that track record? It just illustrates the stunning mismanagement of the Union's economic affairs and the incompetence of the bureaucrats making the decisions. Even so, these same leaders have no qualms about telling Greece to step in line and follow their diktats to the letter.

Can you believe the arrogance?

Fortunately, Greece has broken from the herd and set out on a new course. They've disposed the mealy-mouth, sellout politicians who used to run the country and put the A-Team in their place. And, boy, are they happy with the results. Syriza's public approval ratings are through the roof while Varoufakis has become the most admired man in Europe. The question is whether this new troupe of committed leftists can deliver the goods or not. So far, there's reason for hope, that is, if we can agree about what Varoufakis's strategy really is.

In earlier writings, Varoufakis said that he wants a New Deal for Greece. He said:

"Unless we have a new deal for Europe, Greece is not going to get a chance... It's a necessary condition that the eurozone finds a rational plan for itself... until and unless the eurozone finds a rational plan for stopping this train wreck throughout the European Union, throughout the eurozone, Greece has no chance at all." Naked Capitalism)

Okay, so Varoufakis wants to stay in the EU, but he wants a change in policy. (Reducing the debts, ending austerity, and boosting fiscal stimulus.) But he also has more ambitious plans of which no one in Brussels, Frankfurt or Berlin seems to be aware. He wants to change the prevailing culture of the Eurozone; gradually, incrementally, but persistently. He wants a Europe that is more democratic and more responsive to the needs of the member states, but he also wants a Europe that is more united via institutions and programs that will strengthen the union. He believes that success will only be achieved if concrete steps are taken "to unify the banking system," mutualize debt ("the Federal Government having its own debt over and above states.") "...And thirdly we need an investment policy which runs throughout the Eurozone... a recycling mechanism for the whole thing. Unless we have these things... I'm afraid there is absolutely nothing to avert the continuation of this slow motion derailment." (Naked Capitalism)

So, there you have it. Nationalize the banking system, create a Euro-wide bond market, and establish mechanisms for fiscal transfers to the weaker states like we do in the US via welfare, food stamps, gov contracts, subsidies etc. to create some balance between the very rich and productive states like California and New York and the poorer states like South Dakota and Oklahoma. That's what it's going to take to create a viable United States of Europe and escape these frustratingly recurrent crises. Varoufakis knows this, but of course he's not pushing for this. Not yet at least.

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Mike is a freelance writer living in Washington state.

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