How the
Oligarchs Ruined Greece
By Pavlos
Eleftheriadis FROM OUR NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2014 ISSUE
The Foreign
Affairs
Just a few
years ago, Greece
came perilously close to defaulting on its debts and exiting the eurozone.
Today, thanks to the largest sovereign bailout in history, the country’s
economy is showing new signs of life. In exchange for promises that Athens would enact
aggressive austerity measures, the so-called troika -- the European Central
Bank, the European Commission, and the International Monetary Fund -- provided
tens of billions of dollars in emergency loans. From the perspective of many
global investors and European officials, those policies have paid off.
Excluding a one-off expenditure to recapitalize its banks, Greece ’s budget
shortfall totaled roughly two percent last year, down from nearly 16 percent in
2009. Last year, the country ran a current account surplus for the first time
in over three decades. And this past April, Greece returned to the
international debt markets it had been locked out of for four years, issuing $4
billion in five-year government bonds at a relatively low yield -- only 4.95
percent. (Demand exceeded $26 billion.) In August, Moody’s Investors Service
upgraded the country’s credit rating by two notches.