The country of the Parthenon is poised for a fresh collapse on Tuesday, when the Greek government is expected to miss a 1.6 billion euro ($1.8 billion) payment to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The default will send the already cratered economy on a course that’s uncertain in almost every way except for its direction and general velocity: downward and fast.
The failure guarantees a fresh round of suffering for the country’s workers. If you’re in the Greek labor force, there’s a one in four chance you’re unemployed at the moment — unless you’re 25 or younger, in which case your chance of wall-leaning and stoop-sitting is more like one in two.
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Hundreds of people gathered near Parliament in Athens on Sunday and Monday, denouncing the IMF and passing out leaflets that favored a default over continued budget cuts. The gatherings were smaller than the anti-austerity riots of three or four years ago. But that’s probably less a sign of hope, then of desperation. The country’s banks are closed for at least a week in a bid for stability; ATM withdrawals have been capped at about $60 a day. At that amount, who can afford gas masks let alone permanent markers and poster board?
To understand where Greece is headed, what it means for Europe, and whether we should all invest in bunkers, gold bars and bulk food, it’s necessary to trace the story back a few years, and then follow the thread forward. It’s a messy tale, of course.
The debt problem was there when Greece faked its way into the European Union in 2001. The eurozone is a union of 19 countries that have accepted the euro as their sole legal tender, the only money in their collective pockets. Member countries were required to run no more than a 3% deficit, which Greece claimed to beat in what was essentially their application to the EU. A 2004 audit showed otherwise. The real deficit was closer to 15%.
No one noticed Greece’s insurmountable debt during the boom times. Between 2004 and 2007, the world economy expanded rapidly, and Greece’s deficit problems disappeared beneath a wave of cheap loans and foreign investments. Among the issues later identified: Huge public pensions, generous official retirement ages in the mid-50s, widespread corruption, a culture of tax evasion, and insanely bloated government salaries.
After the crash, Greece became a certified global charity case. In May of 2010, the eurozone and the IMF agreed a three-year package to rescue Greece’s debt-ridden economy. The deal included painful cuts, totaling more than 30 billion euros. Goodbye, bonuses for public workers. Goodbye, pension increases. Hello, new taxes on booze, tobacco and gasoline. The streets filled with violent protests and at least three people died, including a pregnant woman.








