FBI Had to Slap Down CBS News Over This Fake News Piece About...
A Dance Team Did Not Just Do This Regarding the ICE Shooting in...
Ilhan Omar Just Called on Democrats to Abolish This Agency
DHS Issues Memo Allowing ICE to Arrest, Detain Refugees
The Deplorable Treatment of Afghan Women Is a Glimpse Into Our Future
In Record Time, Voters Are Regretting Electing Socialist Mamdani
Steven Spielberg Flees California Before Its Billionaire Wealth Tax Fleeces Him
Why Does 'Trans' Minnesota Politician Finke Oppose Restricting Adult Websites?
Here's What President Trump Had to Say About the Supreme Court's Tariff Ruling
Rep. Becca Balint Admits What We've All Known About Illegal Immigrants and Voting
Pennsylvania Principal Drops the Hammer on Students' Anti-ICE Protest
Oklahoma Bill Would Mandate Gun Safety Training in Public Schools
Behold the Dumbest Attempt at Comparing Pretti to Rittenhouse
Will The Trump Administration Be Forced to Pay Back Billions in Tariff Revenue?
Justice Thomas Blasts The Supreme Court Majority for Striking Down Trump’s Tariffs
OPINION

Greek Revolt Long Overdue

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Greek Revolt Long Overdue

Germany has been sacking Greece and other Mediterranean economies for years, and the Hellenic revolt against austerity is overdue.

When the euro was established in 1999, prices were translated from the mark, franc and other currencies into euro at prevailing exchange rates. (Greece joined the Eurozone in 2001, giving up the drachma.)

Advertisement

National prices reflected differences in labor costs and efficiency across countries, but owing to a variety of social and demographic conditions, productivity improved more rapidly in Germany and other northern countries. Making goods in the South became too expensive, and Greece and others could no longer export enough to pay for imports.

Without a single currency, the values of the drachma and other Mediterranean currencies would have fallen against the German mark to restore competitive balance.

Europe has few of the mechanisms that facilitate adjustment in the United States, which has a single currency across a similarly wide range of competitive circumstances. A single language permits workers to go where the jobs are, whereas most Greeks and Italians are stuck where they are born. New Yorkers’ taxes subsidize public works, health care and the like in Mississippi through the federal government in ways the European Commission cannot accomplish.

Germany uses its size and influence to resist changes in EU institutions that could alter fiscal arrangements.

Hence, the Greeks and other southern Europeans were forced to borrow heavily from private lenders in the north—mostly through their commercial banks—to provide public services, health care and similar services that were hardly overly generous when measured by German standards.

All this kept German factories humming and German unemployment low.

When the financial crisis and meltdown of global banking made private borrowing no longer viable, Greece and other southern states were forced to seek loans directly from Germany and other northern governments.

Advertisement

Bailouts implemented by Germany through the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the European Commission required labor market reforms, cuts in wages and pensions, higher taxes, and less government spending.

All to restore Greek competitiveness, growth and solvency—and all have absolutely failed.

Starved for investment, the Greek industry is now even less capable of exporting to pay for the imports of everyday items Greeks need. GDP is down 25 percent, unemployment is about 25 percent, and health care spending is down 40 percent.

When austerity began, Greece’s sovereign debt was 110 percent of its GDP. Now it is 160 percent, grows larger by the day and can never be repaid.

That should hardly surprise Chancellor Merkel. Germany pursues many of the same policies that she wants Greece to jettison—it just does those differently.

Many German workers belong to unions that negotiate pay and work rules through national contracts. As a result they enjoy the highest wages and the shortest work week among large industrialized countries.

When recession struck in 2008, German businesses were freer from legal restrictions than Greek employers to lay off workers. So, Berlin subsidized employers to reduce hours, share work and still pay nearly full wages. And Germans were hardly required to accept huge cuts in the quality and availability of health care.

If Greece and the others really straightened out their economies, Germany and other northern countries would lose a great number of jobs to the South and political clout within Europe.

Advertisement

The newly elected Greek government is quite correct to eschew austerity and seek reductions in what it owes northern European governments. In making those loans, the latter chose to ignore key facts.

Namely, the single currency is punishing the South, and solving Mediterranean states’ chronic financial problems will require moving some industry from the North to the South. More austerity will only bleed the patient further.

In the near term, spending more and taxing less will help the Greek economy recover. But unless the single currency is abandoned and the EU is run to benefit all its members, Greece and the other Mediterranean states can never prosper.

Peter Morici is an economist and professor at the University of Maryland and a national columnist. He tweets @pmorici1

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement