The Global Siginificance Of Greek Elections In 2015
By Jon V Kofas
The global significance of the election in Greece is the
symbolism of popular opposition to:
a) Western-imposed austerity that results in income
redistribution from the bottom 80% the population to the top 20%;
b) Blatant disregard for national sovereignty of debtor
nations by the hegemonic creditor governments that represent finance capital;
c) Popular democracy can prevail despite the massive
propaganda by the mainstream media demonizing any political party or movement
appealing for social justice;
d) Contagion effect, as other political movements, PODEMOS
in Spain for example, will follow the precedent set by the Greek election
e) A major blow to the neoliberal model of development under
globalization that the West has been presenting as “the only way” to conduct
economic and social policy.
f) The EU and the US will exert immense pressure on the
newly-elected government to pursue neoliberal policies with some watered down
version of social and economic policies that take into account the working
class and waning middle class. In short, a strategy of co-optation has already
begun, so that the center-left party becomes in essence a neoliberal one in
policy but remains center-left in rhetoric.
g) If co-optation fails, the challenge of the financial and
political elites now is to prevent popular political parties in other nations
asserting national sovereignty and social justice as cornerstones of their
platform. This means that there will be an international overt – media
propaganda - and covert efforts through political and economic means – to
undermine, discredit and topple the elected government and bring about regime
change.
On 25 January 2015, Greece elected SYRIZA, a left-of-center
regime opposed to the harsh austerity measures that the IMF and EU had imposed
along with a series of policies that essentially resulted in the
super-concentration of wealth in the hands of a few thousand families while 50%
of youth were unemployed in an economy where “formal unemployment” remains at
26% and the poverty rates at one third of the population. These are Great
Depression conditions, but the defenders of austerity and neoliberalism insist
that there is no alternative.
The initial Western press reaction ranged from panic to
caution about SYRIZA that people chose to lead them. Nothing about the process
of democracy working, nothing about popular sovereignty, nothing about the
sense of hope, real or not, that the new government instills in a country that
has seen its income drop by one-third and the middle class destroyed. The only
issue is that neoliberalism now threatened beyond Greece, in Spain, Italy, Portugal
and other debtor nations that will dare choose governments representing the
majority and not banks and corporations.
Some media outlets called SYRIZA Communist, others radical
left, others populist left. Not a single mainstream media outlet bothered to
explain the ideological orientation of the political party or its platform,
other than to state it opposes austerity, opposition that right wing political
parties across Europe also share. Instead of stating the ideological position
and specific platform of the party, the mainstream Western media simply warned
that SYRIZA poses a threat to markets and to EU’s stability, as though the EU
has been stable in the past five years when SYRIZA was in the opposition.
SYRIZA is a coalition of Socialist and reformist centrist
political elements that rests on an ideology of reformism within the system.
Its ideology has roots in European Socialism, with strong elements of the
Euro-Communism of the 1970s. Eclectic and rooted in the concept of social
justice that entails creating a strong social welfare safety net, the ideology
of SYRIZA is classic European social democratic, despite rhetoric that tends to
carry over to Socialism. The party platform includes private sector backed by
the state, a multi-dimensional foreign trade policy and a foreign policy rooted
in national interests rather than Western imperial interests intended to
destabilize the Middle East and Balkans.
The triumph of neoliberalism – a trend that started under
the conservative governments of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan in the
1980s – was complete with the downfall of the Communist bloc and the global
economic integration in which Communist China became the engine for global
growth since the 1990s.
The symbolic significance of SYRIZA winning the election has
shocked the neoliberals across Europe, because they fear national sovereignty
and popular resistance to globalization. Throughout the 20th century, the
Western countries tried everything from political and economic pressure to
military coercion to pursue their interests in non-Western countries as well as
the periphery of Europe. The goal was always integration under the
patron-client model, a model of hegemony by the Western countries – the patrons
- over the rest they see as client states serving Western economic, political
and military interests. The anathema for the West has always been a strong
state representing national interests and opposed to the patron-client
integration model.
How did Greece along with many other EU and non-EU countries
fall into debt? The number one culprit was that the fiscal system favored the
top income earners, the financial elites foreign and domestic, forcing the
state to engage in heavy borrowing to meet its needs, among them a very
expensive defense program that added nothing to the productive capacity of the
economy. The austerity and neo-liberal solution resulted in a sharp rise of the
public debt which cannot possibly be serviced under any conditions short of a
50% haircut with the investors taking the loss.
The economy has been experiencing negative growth under
austerity, unemployment and poverty rates are the highest in the EU, and the
prospects for development are almost nil in the absence of massive investment
that has been absent. Despite this reality, the representatives of the Western
financial elites have already condemned SYRIZA even before it has had the
chance to take power.
Defending neo-liberalism and corporate welfare, which means
massive transfer of public funds from social programs to corporations, a number
of bank representatives have argued that SYRIZA must either comply with IMF-EU
austerity, or face the consequences of no credit from the European Central
Bank. Naturally, this means that Greece must accept integration under the
German-imposed patron-client model, or face a possible exodus from the euro.
Saxo Bank chief economist Simon Smith argued that: “The
troika (ECB, EU & IMF) are now in a bind. If they cede to [Greece’s]
demands, then markets will display no faith in the ability of other eurozone
members to stick to austerity policies. If they stand their ground and Greece
leaves, then the irreversible nature of the single currency would have been
broken, which would make other peripheral nations more vulnerable as investors
would be prepared to price in exit in certain circumstances.”
The rating agency Standard and Poor's immediately warned the
new government of a possible downgrade if it deviates from the IMF-EU austerity
program and neo-liberal policies. Similar warning have come pouring in from
official circles and banks across Europe. These are reminders that Greece has
no leverage and that the patron-client integration model, austerity and
neo-liberalism will remain exactly as the G-7 and financial markets dictate. By
contrast, the new prime minister Alexis Tsipras visited the memorial site of
Nazi war-crime victims, symbolically reminding Germany that it owes billions in
war reparations to Greece, while reminding the West about the absence of
justice when it comes to relations between core countries and periphery within
the EU. Of course, the EU and US will try both co-optation and coersion and
will even threaten to isolate Greece if it dares defy austerity measures and
neo-liberalism.
The Europeans know very well that if Greece leaves the euro
it will be even more costly for the creditor nations and the markets than if it
remains and cuts a deal to reduce its public debt and payments it cannot
possibly afford to make unless it impoverishes more than half of its
population. The financial and political elites have major challenges not
because SYRIZA won the election in January 2015, for that may prove highly
symbolic victory for popular democracy, but because the rest of the world,
especially the rest of EU, needed a concrete example to point the way to an
alternative that at least addresses some social justice and gross socioeconomic
inequality issues. If Spain follows the Greek example, that will not be just a
symbolic defeat for neo-liberalism, but a substantive one with serious
political and economic consequences for the EU. Fear and dread of popular
democracy and national sovereignty on the part of the financial elites and
mainstream political parties remains very strong motivator for the strategies
they adopt to combat any efforts to water down neo-liberalism and the
patron-client integration model on a world scale.
In foreign policy, SYRIZA will try to pursue a policy that
tries to take into account the roles of China and Russia, while remaining part
of the Western sphere of influence. Greek foreign policy government will depend
on many factors. It is true that SYRIZA, like PASOK in the early 1980s, will
have a rhetorical commitment of a more balanced foreign policy that takes into
account Russia's interests in Greece and throughout the EU. In the last
analysis, Greece is a NATO member, it is an EU member and it has constrictive
conditions placed on it. On the other hand, Turkey is also a NATO member, but
does not necessarily follow whatever the EU and US dictate. My guess is a
foreign policy that at least takes into account China and Russia, while making
accommodations to the West without submitting completely to the West as have previous
regimes. One last caveat here, there is a huge difference between rhetoric
politicians use for domestic and international consumption and what measures
they take. SYRIZA has what I call "non-aligned" rhetoric employed,
but in the end it will have to accommodate the West more than its leaders now
realize.
Jon V Kofas is a novelist. He blogs at http://www.jonkofas.blogspot.in/
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