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by Michael Snyder
June 23, 2015
from
TheEconomicCollapseBlog Website

When it comes to geopolitics, there are
often wheels working within wheels that are working within wheels.
Once in a while we get a peek behind the
scenes, but for the most part
the machinations of the global elite
remain shrouded in mystery most of the time. And sometimes the
global elite appear to be doing things that, on the surface, do not
seem to make much sense at all.
What is
going on in Europe is a perfect
example of this.
If everyone was negotiating honestly, I
believe that a Greek debt deal would have been reached by now. As
this endless crisis has stretched on month after month, it has
become increasingly apparent that more is going on here than meets
the eye.
In particular,
the IMF has been standing
in the way of a deal time after time.
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So what do IMF officials want?
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Are they looking for the
"unconditional surrender" of this new Greek government in
order to send a message to other governments that would
potentially defy them?
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Or could it be possible that the
IMF actually wants a Greek debt default for some other
insidious reason?
When the latest Greek proposal was
embraced with enthusiasm by EU officials, many hoped that this meant
that the crisis would soon be resolved.
But it turns out that there is still one
very important player that is not happy, and that is the IMF.
The following comes from the
Wall Street Journal…
But
the IMF is still unhappy with key aspects of Greece's
new economic proposals and German officials were irritated by
the speed with which the commission welcomed them, warning that
much work needs to be done.
Greece's plan calls for reducing the
deficits in its pension system and government budget by relying
heavily on raising taxes and social-security contributions,
whereas the IMF wanted bigger spending cuts.
The Washington-based IMF has said
Greece's economy is already too heavily taxed and that too many
additional tax increases would hurt economic growth, making it
harder to pay down Greece's debt.
"It
is still short of everything that should be expected,"
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said Monday,
suggesting Greece will have
to modify its proposals significantly to win the IMF's
backing.
So what would make the IMF "happy"?
Would anything short of total
capitulation by the Greek government suffice?
Meanwhile, members of
Syriza are
expressing a high level of frustration with the compromises that
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has already agreed to. At this
point, there is even doubt whether the current Greek proposal could
get through the Greek parliament.
The following comes from Bloomberg…
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
is facing the first signs of dissent within his own party over
his latest plan to end a five-month standoff with creditors.
Some of Syriza's more radical and
populist lawmakers expressed opposition Tuesday to the proposal
as the deal's backers called on members to see the bigger
picture.
"Personally,
I cannot support such an agreement that is contrary to our
election promises," Dimitris Kodelas, a Syriza
lawmaker associated with former Maoists, said in an
interview.
"I
do not care about the consequences of my decision."
Despite all of the optimism that we have
seen this week, the odds of a Greek debt deal getting pushed through
are looking slimmer by the day.
And even if a deal somehow miraculously
happens, all it would really mean is that the can has been kicked
down the road for
a few more months…
Assuming Tsipras can force the deal
through the Greek parliament, and that key creditors such as the
IMF and Germany accept it too, it will do little more than buy
time for negotiations on yet another rescue.
The final tranche of cash from the
existing bailout should be enough to meet repayments due to the
IMF and European Central Bank through the end of August.
But the Greek government will then
have to find more than two billion Euros for both institutions
in September and October.
"If
this week concludes with agreement between Greece and its
creditors, it won't be long before the next chapter in this
drama," said Angus Campbell, senior analyst at
FxPro.
And no matter what happens by the end of
this month, it is a virtual certainty that the economic depression
in Greece will just continue to deepen.
At this point, normal economic activity
in the nation has pretty much ground to a halt.
Just consider the following excerpt from
a recent Zero Hedge article…
"Business-to-business payments
have almost been paused," one Athens businessman says.
"They are just rolling over
postdated cheques."
For Greek banks, mortgage loans left
unserviced by strategic defaulters have become a particular
headache, especially since the Syriza-led government says it is
committed to protecting low-income homeowners from foreclosures
on their properties
"There's a real issue of moral
hazard... Around 70 percent of restructured mortgage loans
aren't being serviced because people think foreclosures will
only be applied to big villa owners," one banker said.
For a long time, I have been warning
that the next major economic crisis would begin in Europe before
spreading across the entire globe.
Greece has a relatively small economy,
but Italy, Spain and France are going down the exact same road that
Greece has gone. And what IMF officials are doing right now is that
they are setting a precedent for future debt negotiations that they
know are almost certainly coming with other countries in the future.
Sadly, most of my readers (being
Americans) don't really grasp the importance of what is going on
over in Europe.
We are watching a horrific train wreck
unfold in slow-motion, and what is going to happen over the next few
weeks is going to have massive implications for the entire planet...
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