by Maria Petrakis
(Bloomberg)
-- “A Day with Yanis Varoufakis,” a satirical post doing the rounds on social
media, shows the Greek finance minister spending his waking hours feted by
adoring fans. He goes to sleep and is jolted awake by a nightmare of German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble cackling.
In what’s
turning that nightmare into reality, Greece’s month-old anti-austerity
government led by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras had a rude awakening last
Friday when German-led pressure forced it to pedal back on most election
pledges in the face of national insolvency. On the streets of Athens, Greeks
used to political flip-flops in the five years of their odyssey to financial
health are taking what has been a capitulation in their stride.
“When you
have your hand outstretched and they say there’s no money, that’s when you put
your hands up in the air,” said Alexandra Dimopulos, 60, a retired civil
servant. “You may have all the good intentions in the world but that means
nothing when you have no money for them.”
Tsipras
huddled with his lawmakers in the parliament on Feb. 25 for more than 10 hours
after euro-area partners signed off on a Greek commitment to a four-month loan
extension based on promises the government would stick closely to the bailout
plan it had pledged to the country’s citizens it would tear up.
While
ordinary Greeks say they appreciate the government’s efforts to argue their
case, albeit unsuccessfully, the reversal may test the unity of the ruling
party, which teamed up with a smaller anti-austerity group to win the majority
it needed to govern. Manolis Glezos, a 92-year-old Syriza European Parliament
lawmaker and World War II resistance veteran, has already criticized the agreement.
Challenge
Within
“The
biggest challenge for the government right now is not the rather tame
opposition in parliament, it is the opposition inside the senior party Syriza
itself,” said Jens Bastian, a former member of the European Commission’s Greek
task force, in a Bloomberg TV interview. “How you manage expectations among
that constituency, that will be the real challenge.”
Varoufakis
evoked the Odyssey, the ancient Greek poem by Homer that former Prime Minister
George Papandreou referred to in 2010 when he accepted cuts to wages and
pensions in return for what would become 240 billion euros ($269 billion) in
loans from euro-area partners and the International Monetary Fund.
“Sometimes
like Ulysses you need to tie yourself to a mast in order to get to where you’re
going and to avoid the sirens,” said Varoufakis. “We intend to do this.”
Papandreou’s
support and ability to pass austerity measures demanded by the country’s
creditors was whittled down one seat at a time amid violence and riots and
protests by tens of thousands of Athenians camped in front of Parliament until
he lost power at the end of 2011.
Greeks
don’t want to see a return to those days.
‘Good
Easter’
“There are
always reactions within parties, in all parties when things don’t go according
to plan,” Paraskevi Psyhidou, 50, who owns a souvenir store in the old
neighborhood of Plaka. “I am hoping for a good Easter, no problems, no
upheaval.”
Polls show
support for Tsipras surging since he won elections, providing a wellspring of
support among the public even amid rumblings from his party cadres.
A Feb. 22
Public Issue survey of 1,008 people questioned between Feb. 12 and Feb. 17,
before the agreement was reached in Brussels, showed 64 percent believed the
country to be on the right path, a finding that was the highest in at least 20
years, according to the pollster. Three times as many people supported the
direction the country was taking after the election as did before the vote.
Feelings of
hope and optimism soared to 29 percent from 10 percent before the election. Tsipras
has a personal approval rating of 87 percent, climbing 42 percentage points
after his election.
Not Over
“At least
they’re trying to negotiate,” said Konstantinos Velounakis, 55, who owns a
jewelry store in central Athens, and didn’t vote for Tsipras. “I hadn’t seen
that before. They’ve put the word out that we’re not all in the same boat,
north and south, and that’s good.”
The public
support may be critical to Tsipras’s ability to stick to the agreement reached
with euro-area partners.
While the
main sentiment in Greece is hope, in Brussels the word being bandied about is
“trust”. The euro-area finance ministers had barely approved the Greek outline
of plans to appease creditors, when European Central Bank President Mario Draghi
and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde heaped on more pressure.
Draghi said
the key to Greece winning more funding were “commitments” on legislation. Lagarde
pressed for specifics and “clear assurances” that reforms will happen.
For some
Greeks, that kind of pressure means the government will be forced to put in
place measures they have been opposed to.
“They said
one thing and are doing something different -- this is to be expected,” said
Psyhidou. “We don’t have the money. The Odyssey is not finished yet. We have a
way to go.”
To contact
the reporter on this story: Maria Petrakis in Athens at mpetrakis@bloomberg.net
To contact
the editors responsible for this story: Vidya Root at vroot@bloomberg.net Vidya
Root, John Simpson
No comments:
Post a Comment