Greek Democracy Dies

Greek Democracy Dies

‘The state is bankrupt, let’s face it,’ an editorial in the Greek daily Kathimeriniconcluded the day after a museum in ancient Olympia – left virtually unguarded owing to personnel cuts – was robbed in broad daylight. The furore over the country’s economic troubles has deflected foreign attention from the collapse of the political system, though it’s causing Greeks more anxiety than the disastrous drop in their standard of living. They know it has ceased to function and that it cannot be expected to bring about an economic recovery. Opinion abroad is that Greece has too much democracy and not enough of an economy and foreign creditors are determined to redress the balance. The terms of the latest bailout clearly recognise the critical condition of the state, but insist nonetheless on a reform programme whose aim is to squeeze as much money out of it as possible for debt repayment. According to theIndependent of 19 February, ‘Greece will become an economic – and to a large extent a political – colony of Germany and its allies.’

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