[ The following appeal has been released today. Among the initial signatories of
the call are many trade unionsts, the chairman of the German TUC, the
chairpersons of six major German trade unions, many economists, social
scientists, but also politicians of the Left Party and the SPD. ]

Greece after the election – not a threat but an opportunity for Europe

The political landslide in Greece is an opportunity, not only for that
crisis-ridden country but also for a fundamental reassessment and revision of EU
economic and social policy.

We highlight once again the criticism already voiced on many occasions in the
past by the trade unions: right from the outset, the key conditions under which
Greece receives financial assistance did not deserve the label ‘reform’. The
billions of euros that have flowed into Greece have been used primarily to
stabilise the financial sector.

At the same time, the country has been driven into deep recession by brutal
cutbacks in government spending that at the same time have made Greece the most
heavily indebted country in the entire EU. The consequence is a social and
humanitarian crisis without precedent in Europe. One third of the population is
living in poverty, the welfare state has been hugely weakened, the minimum wage
cut by 22% and the collective bargaining system and other protections for those
still in work dismantled; at the same time the burden of taxation on the lower
income groups has been increased. Unemployment now stands at 27%, while youth
unemployment is as high as more than 50%. Many people do not have the means to
pay for food, electricity, heating and accommodation. A large share of the
population no longer has health insurance and can access medical care only in
emergencies. The election result is a devastating verdict on this failed policy.

All this had nothing to do with reforms designed to address Greece’s actual
problems. None of the country’s structural problems has been solved, but
additional ones have certainly been created. This has been a policy of cutback
and destruction, not rebuilding. Genuine structural reforms worthy of the name
would have led to the emergence of new opportunities for economic development
rather than driving a highly qualified generation of young people abroad.
Genuine structural reforms would have included serious attempts to tackle tax
evasion. Genuine structural reforms would have tackled clientelism and
corruption in public procurement. The new Greek government is being challenged
to draw up its own reconstruction and development plans, which have to become
part of a ‘European Investment Plan’, as has long been demanded by the trade
unions, and to create the conditions in which such plans can bear fruit.

Serious negotiations with the new Greek government must get under way, without
any attempts at blackmail, in order to open up economic and social prospects for
the country beyond the failed austerity policy. This applies in particular to
the ruinous obligations agreed with the previous government, now voted out of
office, that were the prerequisites for payment of the international loans.
Europe must not persist in pursuing, at the expense of the Greek population, a
policy that has been decisively rejected by the majority of Greek voters. Just
carrying on regardless is no longer an option!

The rejection at the ballot box of those responsible for the previous policy in
Greece is a democratic decision that must be respected at the European level.
The new government must be given a fair chance. Anyone who now demands that the
country simply continue along the previous, so-called ‘path to reform’ is in
fact denying the Greek people the right to a democratically legitimised change
of policy in their country. And if they add that such a change of policy is, at
best, possible only if Greece leaves the European currency union, then that is
tantamount to saying that the European institutions are incompatible with
democratic decisions taken in the member states. Such statements will merely
give a shot in the arm to the burgeoning nationalist movements across Europe.

The democratic deficit at European level, oft-lamented but still not yet
overcome, must not be even more firmly entrenched by constraining democracy in
the member states. Rather, as many of us emphasised in 2012 in a call for action
entitled ‘Founding Europe Anew!’, democracy at EU level must be strengthened if
the European project is to gain renewed credibility. The European project will
not be furthered by austerity dictates but only by a bottom-up democratic
initiative in favour of economic regeneration and greater social justice.

This initiative must be supported now in the interests of the Greek people. At
the same time, it will help to kick-start the process of policy change across
Europe as a whole. The political upheaval in Greece must be turned into an
opportunity to establish a democratic and social Europe!

This version:
http://wp.europa-neu-begruenden.de/griechenland-chance-fuer-europa/greece-after-the-election-not-a-threat-but-an-opportunity-for-europe/

German version & first signatories:
http://www.europa-neu-begruenden.de

To sign the petition:
http://wp.europa-neu-begruenden.de/griechenland-chance-fuer-europa/griechenland-nach-der-wahl-keine-gefahr-sondern-eine-chance-fuer-europa/aufruf-unterzeichnen/
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