(The NY Times is shameless. They cite an expert in this article 
from the Peterson Institute for International Economics about the 
need for drastic cuts in Greece. So which Peterson do you think 
this institute is named after? You guessed it. Peter G. Peterson.)

NY Times June 22, 2011
Some Greeks Fear Government Is Selling Nation
By RACHEL DONADIO and STEVEN ERLANGER

ATHENS — They are the crown jewels of Greece’s socialist state, 
and they are now likely to go to the highest bidder: the ports of 
Piraeus and Thessaloniki; prime Mediterranean real estate; the 
national lottery; Greek Telecom; the postal bank and the national 
railway system.

And then comes the mandated deeper round of austerity measures, 
which will slash the wages of police officers, firefighters and 
other state workers who are protesting in Athens, and raise the 
taxes of citizens already inflamed by a recession-plagued economy 
and soaring joblessness.

After winning a pivotal confidence vote on his new cabinet on 
Tuesday, Prime Minister George Papandreou now has an even tougher 
task: to carry out a radical remedy of forced auctions and fiscal 
austerity for a sickened economy already in a deep slump.

The European Union, the European Central Bank and the 
International Monetary Fund, known as the “troika,” say that is 
the only way out for a heavily indebted Greece, while some 
economists say the program resembles medieval bloodletting — a 
dose of pain highly unlikely to revive the patient.

Mr. Papandreou’s first task is to persuade his governing Socialist 
Party to pass a bill that would save or raise about $40 billion by 
2015, equivalent to 12 percent of Greece’s gross domestic product, 
through wage cuts and tax increases, at a time when the economy is 
shrinking.

To put that in perspective, spending cuts and tax increases of a 
similar scale in the United States would amount to $1.75 trillion, 
considerably more sweeping than even the most far-reaching 
proposals for reducing the American federal budget deficit. And 
Greece has promised to generate another $72 billion by selling off 
prime state assets, which many Greeks consider a fire sale of 
national patrimony.

While the commitment to austerity will allow Greece access to a 
fresh infusion of international aid, a growing chorus of 
economists say that the government’s new program will at best 
delay default and a restructuring of its debt, which is already 
more than 150 percent of the country’s gross domestic product. 
Steeper budget cuts and tax increases, they say, are the enemy of 
economic growth, which Greece desperately needs to make its debt 
burden lighter.

“You cannot keep on milking the cow without feeding it,” said 
Konstantinos Mihalos, the president of the Hellenic Chamber of 
Commerce in Athens.

In fact many economists fear Greece has already entered a “debt 
trap,” where paying the interest on its mound of debt requires 
more and more loans. “The Greeks have been told to accept more of 
the medicine that has already failed to treat the disease,” said 
Simon Tilford, chief economist at the Center for European Reform 
in London.

The Greeks have already reduced their deficit by five percentage 
points of the gross domestic product, “unprecedented cuts in a 
modern economy,” Mr. Tilford said. “But the cuts have had a much 
stronger negative impact on the economy than the troika imagined, 
and fiscal austerity has pushed the economy deep into recession. 
Debt can only be paid out of income, and that means growth.”

Greece does not have access to many tools to fight recession, like 
devaluing its currency or cutting interest rates, at least as long 
as it remains a member of the euro zone. Its monetary policy is 
controlled by the European Central Bank.

Some independent economists accept that Greece has no choice but 
to try a fresh round of cuts. Edwin M. Truman of the Peterson 
Institute for International Economics in Washington said Greece 
had to go through more pain because it had run a budget deficit 
even before making payments on its debt, meaning it needed loans 
to pay off its loans.

Only after Greece reorganizes its budget, tax collection and labor 
market and is running a surplus — not including interest payments 
on the debt — can economists begin to calculate how much in debt 
payments Greece is actually able to afford, and then figure out 
how big a debt restructuring it needs.

“As long as they’re running a primary deficit, they need to keep 
tightening the belt,” Mr. Truman said. “Rescheduling now doesn’t 
relieve Greece of the burden of fixing the economy to create a 
surplus.”

It is not getting any easier. In the year since its first bailout, 
Greece has cut $17 billion through across-the-board wage cuts, 
layoffs and attrition in its bloated state sector, which employs 
800,000 people, a quarter of the Greek work force. But given its 
recession, the economy shrank and tax revenues fell, meaning that 
Greece did not meet the original target of a government deficit of 
9.1 percent of G.D.P. as agreed with its foreign lenders, 
prompting them to demand more cuts.

European demands have placed Mr. Papandreou in an increasingly 
untenable position. He must sell the increasingly restive Greek 
people on more austerity with no clear signs of recovery. And he 
has to persuade his Socialist Party on reforms that undo almost 
everything the party has stood for in the past.

At least one Socialist member of Parliament, Alexandros 
Athanasiadis, has already announced that he will not vote for the 
new austerity measures, citing his opposition to selling part of 
the state’s stake in the electricity utility whose power plants 
dominate his district in northeastern Greece.

On Wednesday, members of the public power company union, Genop, 
occupied the Transport Ministry and orchestrated some power 
failures to protest the sale, which seeks to reduce the state’s 
stake to 34 percent from 51 percent in the profitable company.

To many Greeks, selling that and many other state-owned companies 
and assets, even those that currently lose money, is tantamount to 
a loss of sovereignty — especially if wealthy investors from 
Germany and the other big European powers pushing austerity of 
Greece end up purchasing the assets for a hefty discount.

“We’ve always been advocates of privatization because the national 
state cannot play the role of the entrepreneur and has in fact 
proven to be a complete disaster every time they attempt to do 
so,” said Mr. Mihalos of the Athens Chamber of Commerce.

“But at these extremely low levels, especially for those companies 
quoted on the stock exchange, we have to be very wary,” he added. 
“If we go by today’s values, as a result of the recession and the 
crisis the country finds itself in, it will be really selling the 
crown jewels at a pittance of their cost.”

Mr. Papandreou’s government has not managed to make a convincing 
case for the sell-off to many Greeks, where the idea of a fire 
sale has taken hold, setting off a wave of national indignation. 
“Imagine if you asked me for my apartment, and I gave you the 
whole building,” said Dorothea Ekonomopoulou, a public school 
teacher in Athens, as she stood among demonstrators in Syntagma 
Square this week.

Rachel Donadio reported from Athens, and Steven Erlanger from Paris.
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