Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Greece exits bailout program after years of financial turmoil

- By Venetia Rainey

In central Athens, the sun-drenched streets are filled with tourists clutching shopping bags and locals crowding cafes. It’s a far cry from the turmoil that has rocked this country over the past eight years.

At long last, things seem to be looking up here. On Monday, after eight years of emergency loans, Greece exited the internatio­nal bailout program that prevented it from going bankrupt.

It will continue to face difficult targets to pay back more than $300 billion in loans — the biggest bailout in history — but its creditors, including the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, have decided that the country is good to invest in again.

It’s also a major milestone in the European Union’s long and bumpy recovery from the 2008 global financial crash. With a population of just over 10 million, Greece is a small country relative to its neighbors, but its finances were in by far the worst shape, and at one point its insolvency threatened to break up the bloc entirely.

As a result, top EU officials have declared the end of its bailout scheme — the last of five rolled out across Europe — a huge victory.

“Greece joins Ireland, Spain, Cyprus and my own country, Portugal, in the ranks of Euro-area countries that turned around their economies and once again stand on their own feet,” said Mario Centeno, head of the Eurogroup.

Far from celebratin­g, Greeks are still reeling from heavy pension cuts, tax hikes and troubling levels of unemployme­nt, which at 20 percent remains the highest in the Eurozone despite having dropped in recent years. Years and years of crippling austerity measures have shrunk Greece’s economy by a quarter, prompting hundreds of thousands of young people to emigrate and pushing nearly half the country’s elderly below the poverty line.

The effects of these ruinous policies — required by Greece’s creditors in order to better balance the books — can be seen everywhere, from the ubiquitous political graffiti on buildings to the homeless people rummaging through bins.

What pains Greek people most is that this is not really the end. Another round of pension cuts is due next year, taxes remain among the highest in Europe and the country will remain under “surveillan­ce” to stop it from lapsing into profligacy again. It’s a show victory — and Greeks know it.

“I don’t think that us exiting the bailout is going to make a huge difference,” said Theonie Vougioukli, an English teacher out shopping in the bustling Monastirak­i neighborho­od. “It’s only on paper and, in general, I don’t think that people really care aboutthat right now.”

What they do care about is Greece’s financial future, which still feels very uncertain. These sentiments are echoed everywhere.

“The bailout is over, but the shackles and the asphyxiati­on continue,” warned major newspaper To Vima last Sunday.

Over in Athens’ central market, butchers present their finest cuts of meat for customers, but business has been slow in recent years.

“The economic situation is very low. It’s difficult with the money,” said Spyrous, a 45-year-old butcher, who declined to give his last name.

Spyrous has worked at this market for his entire life. He thinks the end of the Greek bailout is a fraud.

“It’s a trick, a political trick from our [prime] minister,” he said. “I don’t think that something will change.”

In a way, Spyrous is right. Despite the bailout being officially over, Greece still has anenormous debt to pay off, a debtthat comes to 180 percent of its GDP — the second highestin the world after Japan.

As part of its ongoing surveillan­ce, the government must somehow maintain a budget surplus until 2060 for its creditors. It says it will do that without more austerity measures — but that seems unlikely.

For Greeks like Chris Kontos, a fashion photograph­er and magazine editor, it’s clear this financial crisis will have an impact for generation­s.

“If I ever have any kids, they will face the consequenc­es of austerity that is going to go on for almost 40 more years,” he said as he sipped an espresso in downtown Athens. “I don’t see how anyone can be really positive about today.”

 ?? Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images ?? Young men sit on a hill overlookin­g Athens this month.
Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images Young men sit on a hill overlookin­g Athens this month.
 ?? Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images ?? Tourists take pictures of slogans on a wall Aug. 18 in central Athens.
Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images Tourists take pictures of slogans on a wall Aug. 18 in central Athens.

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