Skip to main content

Greece's debt is immoral and should be wiped

by Stuart Munckton

Greece's austerity-and-debt-driven crisis has prompted a humanitarian catastrophe.

The Australia-Greece Solidarity Campaign says half of all young people cannot find work, there is a growing shortage of essential medicines and child malnutrition rates have reached levels not seen since World War II. Pensions, meanwhile, have been cut by 15–44%, with 45% of all pensioners living below the poverty line. Suicide rates have skyrocketed.

All very sad, no doubt, but surely you cannot just allow reckless behaviour by the Greek people without any consequences?

After all I am sure, like me, you still recall the way the greed-addled Greek pensioners nearly brought down the entire global financial system with their unregulated, reckless speculation.

Why should we have sympathy for the tens of thousands of Greek public servants sacked under austerity measures demanded by Greece's creditors — the “Troika” of the European Commission, European Central Bank (ECB) and International Monetary Fund (IMF) — when they brought down the likes of Lehman Brothers?

OK, maybe that was the large financial institutions that made billions out of a financial bubble based on cheap credit. And then, when the bubble burst in the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) that began in 2007, many financial institutions across the US and Europe were bailed out with public funds, while those responsible for the crisis went — to a suit — entirely unpunished.

But does that mean Europe can really take no action when faced with a country whose combination of total public guarantees to private entities combined with formal government debt amounts to no less than 222% of its gross domestic product?

Maybe not, but then that country is Germany, according to a Financial Times article in February, and the figure is 30 percentage points higher than Greece's.

The reason Greece, not Germany, has been targetted for bailout loans and austerity is entirely political — it is about power.

Greece's debt was built on the cheap credit that flowed freely across the world economy before the GFC hit in 2007 — but in that, it was hardly alone.

With the deep financial instability caused by the GFC and large amounts of potentially unpayable debt sloshing around the economy, financial institutions started looking at exactly who could be made to cough up.

The markets eyed Greece, which had a high debt-to-GDP ratio and was small and weak enough to be bullied. The same credit agencies that gave AAA ratings to debt proven by the GFC to be junk began to raise concerns over the status of Greece's debt.

This made it more expensive for Greece to access credit, eventually pushing the Greek government to agree to bail-out loans to pay its debt. Not only were the loans tied to austerity, but the interest on the new loans loaded Greece up with still more debt.

It may be true that Greece's politicians were reckless, and it is certainly true that Greece's rich are infamous for failing to pay tax, with the richest known to have stashed billions of euros in bank accounts outside the country.

But ordinary Greeks had as little control over their government's decision on debt as we do in Australia, let alone over the endemic tax dodging by their mega-rich. This is like ordinary Australians being punished for the actions of Gina Rinehart.

Greece's people are caught in a giant economic rort. The austerity measures have driven Greece into depression, making it dependent on negotiating more bail-out loans to pay its debts.

Not only do the loans come with interest payments that increase Greece's debt, but the austerity measures on which the funds are conditional ensure Greece remains in depression — and thus dependent on creditors.

This rort, which rips wealth from ordinary Greek people and gives it to the banks and financial institutions, pays well for some. If Greece pays the €1.6 billion in debt now overdue to the IMF, for instance, it will have made a €2.5 billion profit out of the bail out packages, Jubilee Debt Campaign (JDC) said.

A JDC study in January found that more than 90% of the bail-out funds went directly to paying off Greece's creditors. Yet the Greek people have been saddled with greater debt, with Greek government debt rising from 134% of GDP in 2010 to 174% by January.

Far from being the beneficiaries of “European generosity”, the Greek people are its victims.

With the austerity programs, Greece has also become a laboratory for dismantling all the gains of working people across the industrialised world since World War II.

This involves dismantling the social safety net — including the right to retire at a decent age with a decent pension, universal access to health and education, and, crucially, the right to collectively bargain, which the Troika still seeks to destroy.

If the powers-that-be can do that to Greece, it makes it easier to do it elsewhere — and the austerity measures in Greece are being mirrored in other European nations.

Europe's economic and political elites have shown their contempt for democracy. When, after five years of austerity-driven crisis, the Greek people elected the radical left SYRIZA government in January on an anti-austerity platform, the ECB turned the screws, restricting access to needed credit.

With every compromise offered by SYRIZA, the ECB's response has been to strengthen its stranglehold — driving Greece's banking system towards total collapse.

After months of futile talks, with the creditors refusing to seriously consider any of SYRIZA's proposals, SYRIZA refused to sign a deal that amounted to a near total surrender on the platform on which it was elected.

Instead, the government called a referendum on July 5 — with the ECB responding by refusing to extend the limited credit available to Greece, forcing the closure of banks.

When the Greek people voted “no” to creditor demands by 61.5%, the ECB tightened the screws even more. It is clear the Troika wants total surrender — to hammer home the message that “there is no alternative”.

In reality, the only fair way out of the crisis is to write off the debt that is not just unpayable — as even the IMF admits behind closed doors — but illegitimate.

This is not mere rhetoric. The Greek parliament commissioned an audit into Greece's debt, and the official report found the debt was “illegal, illegitimate and odious”.

All forms of economic blackmail against Greece should end and it should be freed from any obligation to impose austerity. Many economists have noted that continuing the austerity measures that drove Greece into depression blocks all hope of recovery.

This is not simply a “Greek” issue, or even a European one, and not just because the uncertainty has caused drops in markets all over the world, including Australia. The issues at stake affect all of humanity. The most important is whether banks and private profit should reign, or democracy.

Source:

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why are Israeli war criminals hiding out in Patagonia?

The Grayzone   The Grayzone 's Oscar Leon examines reports of Israeli veterans of Gaza hiding out in the Patagonia region of Argentina, a country governed by a hardcore supporter of Israel who has forged close ties to messianic networks and the government of Benjamin Netanyahu. To place the issue in a wider context, Leon spoke to veteran Argentine journalist Sebastian Salgado, and Santiago Cuneo, a former boss of Milei and now one of his fiercest opponents. 

BRICS expands to majority of world population: Vietnam joins, USA fails to divide China & Vietnam

Geopolitical Economy Report   BRICS has expanded to 20 countries - 10 members and 10 partners - after adding Vietnam. BRICS+ now makes up 43.93% of world GDP (PPP) and 55.61% of the global population. Ben Norton explains how the US failed to divide China and Vietnam in the Second Cold War. 

Trump Welcomed a War Criminal to the White House

Senator Bernie Sanders   Benjamin Netanyahu has been indicted as a war criminal. His government is systematically killing and starving the people of Gaza. He will be remembered as one of the monsters of modern history. And Trump welcomed him to the White House.  

Funcionario de Trump: el director de la CIA “toma dictado” del Mossad sobre Irán

Un funcionario de la administración Trump le cuenta a The Grayzone que el Mossad israelí está usando al director de la CIA, John Ratcliffe y al jefe del CENTCOM, general Michael Kurilla, para influenciar a Trump con inteligencia manipulada sobre el programa nuclear iraní. Dentro de la Casa Blanca, los disidentes han sido aislados, preparando el terrenno para una guerra de cambio de régimen que pudiera costar vidas estadounidenses.   Max Blumenthal and Anya Parampil  Parte 4 - La jefa de gabinete aísla a Trump con “el general favorito de Israel”   El funcionario de la administración le contó a The Grayzone que la jefa de gabinete de la Casa Blanca, Suzie Wiles, se aseguró de que el presidente permaneciera rodeado por Ratcliffe y el general Michael Kurilla en los briefings relacionados con Irán. Se dice que Ratcliffe toma dictado del Mossad y lee los documentos que ellos prepararon al presidente sin ningún sentido de desapego crítico, o revelar que las valoraciones provinie...

As Trump threatens BRICS, it grows stronger, resisting US dollar and Western imperialism

Geopolitical Economy Report   US President Donald Trump has threatened heavy tariffs on BRICS, claiming the organization is "dead", but it is actually growing in size and influence. 10 members and 10 partners participated in the 2025 BRICS summit in Brazil, where they discussed plans for dedollarization, trade and investment in national currencies, and how to create a more multipolar global order. Ben Norton explains.     Related:   Trump's tariffs: A unique opportunity for BRICS and the Global South to fully escape from dollar tyranny

SHOCKING Outburst in EU Parliament: ‘Isráel Must Be Held Accountable!

The Africa News Network  

Israel is responsible for one of the cruelest genocides in modern history

UN Palestinian Rights Committee   In her address to the Human Rights Council on 3 July 2025, Francesca Albanese, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, warned of a genocide unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank.    She described the situation as “apocalyptic,” stating that “Israel is responsible for one of the cruelest genocides in modern history.”    With over 200,000 Palestinians reported killed or injured and the real toll “far higher,” she accused Israel of dismantling humanitarian aid in Gaza, replacing it with a “so-called 'Gaza Humanitarian Foundation' [that] is nothing else than a death trap.”    She emphasized that this was not an isolated crisis but part of a decades-long “settler colonial project of erasure” that has intensified in recent months through military force, starvation, and mass displacement. Albanese condemned the deep complicity of corporate and state actors i...

Israel Is Building A CONCENTRATION CAMP In Gaza

Owen Jones                    There are no pretenses here. No pretenses at all. This is a genocide being committed in front of the whole world.  

Trump’s Tariff Threat on BRICS BACKFIRES— Is He Fueling the Rebellion?

GVS Deep Dive   Donald Trump just slapped a 10% tariff threat on BRICS countries — calling them “anti-American” and accusing them of trying to destroy the U.S. dollar. But instead of weakening the bloc, his aggressive posture might be doing the opposite.   GVS Deep Dive unpacks Trump’s July 2025 tariff ultimatum, the explosive Truth Social posts, and the BRICS summit response from leaders like Lula and Modi. From new financial systems like BRICS Pay to de-dollarization and sovereign trade in local currencies, the Global South is pushing back. And here’s the twist: as Trump tries to defend the dollar with threats, he may actually be accelerating the very rebellion he fears. 🎯 Why is the U.S. struggling to sign new trade deals? 🇮🇳 Will India bend under Trump’s pressure — or break away? 🌍 Is BRICS the future of global power? 📉 And what happens if the dollar really does decline?     Related:  Trump's tariffs: A unique opportunity for BRICS and the Global So...

US gov't is very afraid of BRICS and dedollarization, Trump insiders reveal

Geopolitical Economy Report   Close Donald Trump allies like Steve Bannon say "the president is pissed every time he looks at the BRICS de-dollarization effort". The US government fears the Global South's challenge to the exorbitant privilege of the dollar. Trump is trying to make an example out of Brazil, threatening high tariffs to punish Lula da Silva, who promotes a multipolar world and a new global reserve currency. Ben Norton explains.     Related:   Trump's tariffs: A unique opportunity for BRICS and the Global South to fully escape from dollar tyranny