Charles heavy sarcasm to my post, which he said was 'interesting' but managed to put a contribution together belatedly, as the only interesting comments to him are usually his own, we do not need to be an economist, and who would want to be anyway, to have very clear understandings of what Brussels is really all about, a simple tolerance of others opinions Charles, or we may thing your a Brussels commissar.Whilst I go along with the 2nd part of your statement, I can't with the first.
Greece, to get out of its current debt burden will have to repudiate them. That will be economically bearable for Germany and shrugged off by the ECB but will be nigh insupportable for Italy and Spain. In any case the continuation of the Greek economy is predicated on the with-held last tranche of the bail-out.
The Greeks still have the lowest direct taxation of all the original members of the EU - so where is Tsiparis going to get all this money to pay for his austerity-busting ideas?
Will the great Lending Public world-wide be prepared to lend their savings to a country which since it's inception has defaulted about ever 6th year? I'm sure Sarnia and Tony Cross will be the first in the queue ;-)
The truth is that the Greeks have wanted to enjoy all the goodies they've seen in the rest of the EU but felt disinclined to pay for it - their successive governments have borrowed to fund the shortfall. This borrowing spree came to an end in 2009, and the first screws of reality have proved too much and they have voted to return to Never-Never Land.
Tsipras MAY get away with repudiating the debt - he'll not be able to fund the goodies he's promised with just the Greeks paying for it.
In fact not much to lose - the total debt is virtually unrepayable - but the Greeks, if they do go it alone, will have to tighten their belts considerably compared to now.
Perhaps he'll persuade Putin to ride to his rescue? I think Venezuela won't be able to...
I just hope we aren't going to see a return to the Greece of 1945-6 or even the early 70s.