Greece will run out of money soon, warns deputy prime minister

“We have been spending the future for half a century. What [the
anti-bailout forces] are really asking from the EU is not just to pay our
bills, but also to pay for the deficit which we are still creating.

“I’m sure the Germans don’t want Greece to leave the euro. What I don’t
know is how much they’re willing to pay. It depends on the German man on the
street. Is he willing to pay his taxes to save Greece? I doubt it.”

After each of the top three parties at the election failed to form a
government, Greece’s president, Karolos Papoulias, will on Sunday hold
last-ditch talks to cobble together a national unity coalition. The
alternative is a fresh election next month which polls show Syriza is likely
to win.

Mr Pangalos compared Syriza’s charismatic leader, Alexis Tsipras, to
Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez.

“Are the Germans going to pay for a guy that wants to imitate Chavez?”
he said. “Except that Chavez has oil, and an army.”

The deputy prime minister also warned that chaos could boost the neo-fascist
Golden Dawn party, which won an unprecedented seven per cent of the vote,
and 21 seats, in Sunday’s election.

“In the places where the police voted, the fascists got 25 per cent,”
he said. “They are a serious threat. They have used violence already –
you don’t know where it will stop.

“You know how it happened in Germany – it started with the Jews, then the
Communists, then everybody – it could happen here. This is the country,
after the Soviet Union and Germany itself, with the biggest percentage of
[Second World War] casualties in its population.”

Mr Pangalos’s Pasok, the Greek Socialist Party, lost three-quarters of its
seats at the election after voters blamed it for the bailout deal and the
cuts, which have caused enormous hardship but failed significantly to reduce
Greece’s debt.

The economy has shrunk by 8.5 per cent in the last year. More than a fifth of
the population is out of work and youth unemployment is almost 54 per cent.

Pasok, together with the main conservative party, New Democracy, previously
won up to four-fifths of the vote. Last week, the two established
pro-bailout parties were reduced to 32 per cent between them.

The streets are calmer since the election. Though Greeks are fearful, there’s
also satisfaction at the blow they’ve dealt to their former rulers.

But the casualties of the bailout are everywhere. On the pavements, junkies
openly inject in the middle of the day. And what is striking about Athens
beggars is how clean and well-groomed so many are: not stereotypical
street-dwellers, but working and professional people deep down on their luck.

As we talked to Mr Pangalos in an upmarket cafe, one man sold lottery tickets
wearing a very decent suit.

Yiannis Bournos, Syriza’s European policy spokesman, told The Sunday
Telegraph
that Greece could afford to reject the bailout deal because
European policymakers dared not risk Greece triggering a domino effect – and
a potential depression – across Europe.

“Mr Schaeuble [Germany’s finance minister] is pretending to be the
fearless cowboy on the radio, saying the euro is secure [against a Greek
exit]. But there’s no way they will kick us out,” he said.

“If we left the euro, the financial markets would attack Italy. If you
owe 3000 euros to the bank and don’t pay, they will kill you. If you owe 10
billion euros, they will do everything for you.”

He criticised the deputy prime minister’s remarks, saying: “Mr Pangalos
is in his own sphere. When reality does not agree with him, reality has a
problem. It’s unbelievable to see the same representatives of the banking
interests and of neoliberalism saying that nothing can change. It reminds me
of religious fundamentalism. There have been so many changes in Europe in
the last two weeks.”

Mr Bournos said that even if the EU cut off payments the Greek government
could still pay salaries and pensions from its domestic tax revenues. He
said the country would seek alternative sources of financing from China,
Russia and the Middle East.

Left-wingers hope that the election of a new socialist president in France,
together with concerns expressed in Italy and the Netherlands about the
austerity package, will soften hearts in Berlin. At least in public,
however, German officials continued cranking up the pressure yesterday.

“If Athens doesn’t stand by its word, that is a democratic decision,”
said the Bundesbank chief, Jens Weidmann, in an interview with the Suddeutsche
Zeitung
newspaper. “But that means the basis for further financial
aid falls away.”

Mr Weidmann insisted the consquences of Greece leaving the euro “would be
more serious for Greece than the rest of the eurozone”.

It’s still possible that everyone could pull back from the brink. The Germans
could soften their demands – next month, Greece is supposed to be outlining
further billions in cuts, something which even pro-bailout politicians are
starting to balk at. The Greek Left could change its simplistic stand. The
can could be kicked down the road some more.

But the euro’s fundamental problems will remain. And it’s equally possible
that the EU will merely use the time to erect bigger financial walls around
Greece, hoping they can leave it to its fate.

Planning for a Greek exit, now seen as likely by many, has stepped up a gear.
Vodafone, a major presence in the Greek telecoms market, said it now sends
all cash earned in Greece to the UK “every evening.”

Andrew Witty, chief executive of Glaxo SmithKline, said no cash was left in
Greece or “most European countries.” Several other British
multinationals have made similar statements.

Jonathan Tepper, an economist with Variant Perception, said a debt default and
Greek euro exit would happen at only moments’ notice after weeks of denials
by all concerned.

“To avoid immediate runs on banks, it would be done in a ‘surprise’
announcement over a weekend when markets and banks are closed,” he
said. “If necessary, Monday and Tuesday would be declared bank holidays
as well.”

During this period, diplomats in Athens have been told, cash machines would be
turned off and all banks closed. Inside, staff would be “redenominating”
euro notes into the new drachma, probably by rubber-stamping them. Capital
controls would be imposed to stop Greeks transferring money out of the
country electronically and border checks would be reinstated to prevent them
taking out unstamped euros in suitcases.

Mr Tepper is one of a growing number of economists who believe that the
so-called “Grexit” might actually be better than years and years
of EU-mandated misery.

“In the past century, 69 countries have exited currency areas with little
downward volatility,” he says. “The experience of emerging-market
countries, such as Argentina, Russia and the ‘Asian tigers,’ shows that the
pain of devaluation would be brief, and rapid growth and recovery would
follow.”

Greece, however, is not Russia, Argentina or the Far East, with massive
mineral wealth and untapped human capital. And everyone concedes that exit
would, in the short and medium term, cause Greeks even more terrible pain.

Most economists think that a new, free-floating drachma would immediately
crash by up to 50 per cent against the euro and other currencies,
effectively halving the value of everyone’s savings and spelling catastrophe
for those on fixed incomes, like pensioners.

EU diplomats in Athens have been warned to expect substantial disorder during
this period, which would, said one, be “a dream moment for Golden Dawn”.

The Sunday Telegraph on Saturday joined the neo-fascists on “patrol”
– their word – around Attiki, a poor, inner-city Athens neighbourhood which
Golden Dawn says it has “cleaned up”.

“This square used to be occupied,” said the patrol leader, Nassos
Rendekakos. “Full of illegal immigrants. We took it back. We just
emptied the square of everyone: Greeks, foreigners, whatever.”

But what if they refused to leave?

“There’s a good way and a bad way,” said Mr Rendekakos. “We
know both ways.”

They weren’t in their black T-shirts on Saturday, but they were still pretty
easy to spot. Their hair was shaved at the sides but not at the top; they
wore near-identical sunglasses, plus biker jackets and gloves, though the
day was warm and sunny.

Certainly the immigrants, not that there are many on these streets just now,
knew who they were, and crossed the road or stepped quietly into doorways as
they passed.

They weren’t Nazis, they insisted, just nationalists.

“It’s not Hitler we like,” said Mr Rendekakos. “It’s the way he
used to make the best for his country. Hitler took a country with so much
debt, unemployment, just before the edge, as we are here – and he managed to
make that country great.”

On Golden Dawn, there are signs of what might be termed buyers’ remorse. The
Sunday Telegraph
found a number of people who’d voted for them but
claimed they now regretted it, and their score in the latest post-election
polls is down. Many other residents, however, were genuinely grateful to the
fascists.

“Six months ago, no-one could walk here,” said Christos Yiannis,
drinking coffee in Attiki’s main square. “Last summer, we didn’t come
out like this at all. The police did nothing. Golden Dawn cleaned up the
squares and made them human for people to enjoy, because the state is
absent. The state has collapsed.”

As two little girls rode pink tricycles round our table, and the old men sat
reading their newspapers in the sun, it was tempting, so tempting, to
believe there are easy answers to tough problems – none tougher than the
mess Greece now finds itself in.

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