Manawatu Standard

Gwynne Dyer: All passion has been spent in Greece

- GWYNNE DYER WORLD VIEW

‘‘We understood the responsibi­lity to stay alive over choosing suicide,’’ said Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, defending his decision to end his rebellion against the European Union’s tough terms for bailing out the Greek economy. He needed to defend it, since he finally gave in to even harsher terms. Sometimes defiance at all costs is a mistake.

If Tsipras really knew he was going to lose his David-and-Goliath struggle with the EU eventually, shouldn’t he have settled earlier for better terms? If he didn’t realise that, what was he doing in the prime minister’s office? So now the firebrand who turned Greek politics upside down is a bit of a zombie.

Back in mid-August, when Tsipras called the snap election that will be held this Sunday, he was still basking in the after-glow of the defiant ‘‘No’’ that Greek voters gave to austerity in his July referendum, and the opinion polls gave his Syriza party 42 per cent support. At least Tsipras had stood up to the wicked Germans and their rich allies in the EU, even if it meant that the banks closed for three weeks and the economy went into a nosedive.

But a lot of Greeks are having sober second thoughts. Tsipras’s quixotic battle with the EU killed what was starting to look like a modest outbreak of growth in the Greek economy, and analysts are now predicting a further decline of up to 4 per cent in Greek GDP this year. Unemployme­nt is still at 25 per cent (50 per cent for young people). Was it all worth it?

Maybe not, and that thought may even have occurred to Alexis Tsipras by now. He was certainly subdued in his television debate with Vangelis Meimarakis, leader of the New Democracy Party, last Sunday, and well he might be.

In the past six weeks, Tsipras’s own Syriza party has split, with 25 of its members of parliament forming a new Popular Unity party. They condemn him for accepting austerity and want Greece to quit the euro instead. They have taken a lot of Syriza’s former voters with them, so Syriza and the centre-right New Democracy party are now neckand-neck in the polls, with less than one percentage point between them.

That one percentage point matters a lot, since in Greek elections the party that wins the most seats is then given another 50 seats as a bonus. But even if Syriza is that party, it will still be very hard to form a new government after Sunday’s election.

During the last debate, Tsipras rejected Vangelis Meimarakis’s call for a broad coalition, saying that it would be ‘‘unnatural’’ for his party and New Democracy to be in government together. It’s hard to see what would be unnatural about it, considerin­g the deal Tsipras signed with the EU, but he is still in denial about what he has done.

Tsipras, like many, maybe most Greeks, wants to have his cake and eat it too. He wants to keep the euro, because he calculates that Greece would have to leave the European Union if it went back to its old currency, the drachma. That is not technicall­y inevitable, but most Greeks reckon it is very likely, and they desperatel­y want to stay in the EU.

But neither Tsiras nor Greek voters want to live with perpetual austerity, which is probably the price of staying in the euro. Countries like Greece, that have run up huge foreign debts, usually deal with the problem by devaluing their currency, but there is no way for Greece to devalue the euro.

There is one way out of this dilemma, of course: get your creditors to give you ‘‘debt relief’’. If they would agree to cut the amount Greece owes by half, it could probably service the remainder of its debt and still grow its economy. That’s what Christine Lagarde, managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), told the eurozone finance ministers last month.

‘‘I remain firmly of the view that Greece’s debt has become unsustaina­ble,’’ she said. (It’s now heading for 200 per cent of GDP.) So she called on the European Union to make ‘‘concrete commitment­s ... to provide significan­t debt relief, well beyond what has been considered so far.’’

The rich eurozone countries don’t want to do that, because other highly indebted members of the EU would then demand the same relief. If they refuse to do it for Greece, however, the IMF will not take part in the 86billion-euro bailout of the Greek government and banks.

If the IMF won’t play, several EU parliament­s (notably the German) may not ratify the deal, whose final details must be settled next month. But a solution will probably be found in the end, most likely by giving Greece a very long grace period, say 30 years, during which it only has to pay the interest, not the principal, on a large part of its debt.

But it’s increasing­ly unlikely that Alexis Tsipras will be the Greek prime minister who negotiates that deal – even though you could argue that it was really his defiance and brinkmansh­ip that forced Greece’s creditors to consider such a deal at all.

Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

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