How the IMF Has Helped to Crush Greece
http://www.alternet.org/world/how-imf-has-helped-crush-greece
The Eurozone has become another economic dead zone.
How the IMF Has Helped to Crush Greece
By Michael Hudson / CounterPunch
September 1, 2015
This autumn may see anti-austerity coalitions gain power in Portugal, Spain and Italy, while Marine le Pens National Front in France presses for outright withdrawal from the eurozone. These countries face a common problem: how to resist the economic devastation that the European Central Bank (ECB), European Council and International Monetary Fund (IMF) troika has inflicted on Greece and is now intending to do the same to southern Europe.
To resist the depression and debt deflation that the troika seeks to deepen, one needs to bear in mind the dynamics that make the IMF un-reformable. Its destructive role in Greece provides an object lesson for how southern Europe must shun its horde of ideologues, as Third World countries learned to avoid it by May 2013, the year that Turkey capped the worlds extrication from IMF advice. Already in 2008, Turkeys prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced: We cannot darken our future by bowing to the wishes of the IMF.[1] Greek voters have now said the same thing.
To soften resistance to the IMFs austerity demands, a public relations drive is being mounted to rehabilitate the myth that the Fund can act as an honest broker mediating between anti-labor finance ministers and the PIIGS Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain. On Friday, August 28, three Reuters reporters published a long think piece trying to show that the IMF is changing and that its head, Christine Lagarde, has seen the light and seeks to promote real debt relief.[2]
The timing of this report seems significant. The IMF got back in business in 2010 when its head, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, overrode its staff and many Board members in order to join the troika and shift the countrys bad debt from French and German bankers onto the Greek people. That is the story I tell in Killing the Host, which CounterPunch published in an e-version last week. (The hard-print and Kindle versions are now available on Amazon.)
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Her's an easy way to think of the IMF: the bagman that collects the vig.