Simon
Shuster / Athens
@shustry July 13, 2015
TIME
Of all the
aspects of Monday’s bailout deal that Greeks found humiliating, nothing drilled
into their sense of pride quite like their government’s promise to sell off
“valuable Greek assets” to the tune of 50 billion euros. The seven-page
agreement, which European leaders thrashed out over the weekend, made no
mention of where Greece is supposed to find that much property to sell. But as they
scrambled for options, officials in Athens
saw no way around the blood-curdling prospect of auctioning off Greek islands,
nature preserves or even ancient ruins.
“It’s an
affront,” says Georgios Daremas, a strategist and adviser to the Greek Ministry
of Labor, Social Security and Social Solidarity. “It’s basically saying sell
the memory of your ancestors, sell your history just so we can get something
commercial for it,” he tells TIME on Monday. “This is an idea to humiliate
Greeks.”
The idea of
locking up Greek assets in a special fund emerged on Saturday from Germany , the
biggest and one of the least forgiving of the creditor-nations involved in the
talks. In order to guarantee repayment on loans to Greece ,
the German Finance Ministry even suggested moving the titles to Greek assets to
an “external fund” in Luxembourg
so that Athens
could not renege on their sale. On this point, Greek Prime Minister Alexis
Tsipras managed to fight off the Germans on Sunday, though it was one of the
very few concessions he managed to get during the marathon talks.
“The deal
is difficult, but we averted the pursuit to move state assets abroad,” Tsipras
said in trying to put a positive spin on the bailout, which would see Greece take
more than 80 billion euros in additional loans in order to stave off bankruptcy
over the next three years.
Greek
payments on its two previous bailouts were also meant come in part from the
sale of state assets. Under the terms of its first bailout in 2010, Greece agreed
to privatize around 50 billion euros in property and infrastructure as a way of
raising money for its creditors. But only 3.2 billion euros have come from
these sales to date. So Germany
and other creditors have good reason to doubt the Greek commitment to
privatization.
Going
forward, Greece
will have to stash its assets in a specially created fund and prepare them for
sale “under the supervision of the relevant European Institutions,” according
to the text of the bailout agreement published on Monday. Asked what kinds of
assets the fund would include, Dutch Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem, one
of the key European negotiators in the bailout talks, said “experts” would be
brought in to settle this question. “I won’t give you any examples, because
it’s not my specialty,” he told reporters in Brussels on Monday.
Most of the
examples would have to come from the government’s land and real estate
holdings, says Daremas, the government official in Athens . “That may include buildings, possible
areas of land, and even islands,” he says. To protect the natural, historical
and archaeological value of such real estate, Greece would need to pass laws and
empower oversight bodies to make sure that “the new owner does not abuse or
damage the property,” says Daremas.
Since Greek
islands and plots of land often house ruins from ancient civilizations, some of
these may also have to be sold, he added. “Maybe some archeological sites that
are not developed,” Daremas says. “But if you have this as a private investment
you also have to assume responsibility for developing the site, of course being
monitored by [Greek] authorities.”
There are,
of course, limits to the privatization of ancient artifacts. The treasures of
Greek antiquity, such as the Acropolis in Athens ,
would never be sold, Daremas says. “That’s impossible. Their value is
immeasurable.”
The idea of
selling the Acropolis came up early in Greece ’s debt crisis. In 2010, two
conservative German lawmakers caused a furor in Greece by suggesting that ancient
ruins should not be off limits to privatization. “Those in insolvency have to
sell everything they have to pay their creditors,” Josef Schlarmann, a member
of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s political party, said at the time. Since
publishing those remarks, the Bild newspaper, Germany ’s
most popular tabloid, has continued to irritate Greeks by asking why the
Acropolis cannot be sold to repay debts to Germany .
“This is
black humor,” says Natalia Kosmidou, a tour guide at the Acropolis in Athens . “The Germans must
have had too much beer.” Although the last five years of economic turmoil have
forced Greece to rely on private donors and foreign foundations to help pay for
the maintenance and restoration of the Acropolis, Kosmidou says, “the Greek
state will always own these monuments, even as the poorest pauper, even
penniless.”
That would
mean waiting until the property market in Greece recovers. “Of course real
estate prices are depressed right now,” says Daremas. “It’s very important to
have time, and to wait for change in the economic climate to be able to sell
them at a fair price.” The Greek promise to sell state assets came with no time
limit in the text of the agreement published Monday. But in their hunger for
guarantees on this latest package of loans to Greece ,
creditors in Germany
will not be happy to wait much longer.
No comments:
Post a Comment