Wheels coming off euro project at fast pace

Talk of eurobonds won’t be sufficient to stave off crisis

Talk of eurobonds won’t be sufficient to stave off crisis

Once again, the pace of the eurozone crisis has quickened. All of the fire-fighting measures of the European establishment have proved insufficient and the basic contradiction within the eurozone has come to the fore. Instead of convergence, divergence between the weaker and stronger economies has been the norm within the currency union.

Default for Greece is inevitable. Despite the 21 July deal, Greek debt will still rise to over 140% of GDP – a completely unsustainable level of debt, particularly in the context of a collapsing economy. Greece’s expulsion from the euro may well flow from that.

The impact of a Greek default and in particular a Greek expulsion from the euro would have reverberations across the continent. The focal point of pressure from the markets would quickly shift to Ireland, Spain and Portugal. Ireland’s situation remains unsustainable, despite the reduction of interest rate as a result of the Greek crisis.

Commission President Barosso’s raising of the question of eurobonds in the European Parliament yesterday is simply an attempt to talk away the crisis. It will not succeed. Eurobonds to the full extent of countries’ debts are clearly not acceptable to the establishment in Germany and other northern European countries.

A new policy is needed in Ireland to replace the slavish adherence to the neo-liberal programme of the EU/IMF/ECB. Austerity has been proven definitively to fail in Greece. Working people across Europe must stand together to reject austerity policies and demand that the debt to the bankers and bondholders is not paid. Instead, we need investment to create jobs and a democratic plan based on public ownership of the key sectors of the economy to redevelop growth.

 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

How to beat the household tax

Next Article

Blanchardstown Hospital: Staff and community must act to save A&E

Related Posts
Read More

Government must be held accountable for blackmail clause

"The European train will be leaving the station on January 1, 2013 and the Irish people should be on board." So declared Taoiseach Enda Kenny in the Dail on Wednesday morning in response to a question of mine relating to the Referendum on the EU Fiscal Compact which the government has been obliged to call. The Taoiseach was speaking in Irish as it was ‘Lá na Gaeilge’, with Leaders’ Questions in Irish. However, the impression he was trying to convey was false in any language, which is that rejecting the Fiscal Compact would somehow mean not continuing as a member of the European Union or indeed as part of the Eurozone.