Daily View: Reaction to EU promise to help Greece
Commentators react to EU leaders' announcement that they will help Greece tackle its debt crisis.
Germany's reluctance to help highlights the difference between the United States who share out the wealth to poorer states and the EU in terms of their attitudes to poorer states:
"We feel your pain. But not enough to put our hands in our pockets to help you. Behind the sham show of solidarity, the simple message for the troubled government of George Papandreou was that Greece is not Alabama and Brussels is not Washington."
Also comparing the US with Europe, the incident will help American understand the differenc. She recalls a difficult interview with a US news channel:
"What I should have asked the man from MSNBC, of course, was how he would feel if the US was proposing to abandon the dollar and embrace a new common currency (the Americano?) which would be shared with all the countries of Latin and Central America - including those with outrageously high debts (as Brazil had at the time)."
as "absurd" the notion that the euro is under threat from Greece's domestic strife:
"After all, in the United States individual cities and states go bankrupt and default on their debts on a fairly regular basis - California doing so quite recently - but no one says it will destroy the dollar. And California is a bigger economy than Greece."
whether strict conditions on help to Greece will work:
"On the one hand, there is a strong strain of puerile anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist feeling in Greek society. On the other, anti-German sentiments linger from Greece's horrific experiences under Nazi occupation from 1941 to 1944. It would not be difficult for populist forces to draw on these prejudices and link them to the austerity plan that the EU is about to force on the Greek government."
and a "half-hearted effort" which will not be enough. The newspaper puts this down to German disinclination to bail out Greece:
"There was a strong whiff of politics in the air. German voters have been paying more than their fair share for European construction for years. Germany's big fear when it abandoned the deutschmark, just over a decade ago, was that it would end up rescuing more profligate countries in the euro zone. Now those fears are coming true."
the deal is not final and the UK could still end up indirectly bailing out Greece:
"As one of the leading members of the IMF, our shareholding at the Washington-based institution could be used as part of a broader crisis package for Southern Europe should the euroland countries refuse to come up with the bail-out support themselves."
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