Print
Email
>
>
How Greece Mortgaged Its Financial Future
Recent
Tags
14 Ohio-class SSBNs 2011 budget 2012 Election 450 Minuteman III ICBMs 50/50 737 787 787 Dreamliner A&D A2/AD A320 A330 AA/AD AAV ABL Abram Acquisition Reform Acquisitions ADAS ADS Advanced Distributed Aperture System Advanced Hawkeye AEA Aegis AEHF Aerostat AESA Afghan surge Afghanistan Agility Aging Air Fleet AgustaWestland AH-1Z Air Defense Air Dominance Air Force Air Force Modernization Air France Air Logistics Center Air Logistics Centers Air Mobility Air National Guard Air Power Air Superiority Airborne ISR airborne laser airborne surveillance Airbus Aircraft Carrier Aircraft Carriers Airlift Airpower AirSea Battle Al Qaeda Alliances Alliant Techsystems Allies Alternate Engine Al-Yamamah American Enterprise Institute America's Future Ammunition Industrial Base Amphibious amphibious warfare AMPV AMT Anniston Anti-Access Anti-Access/Area Denial Apache APL ARFORGEN ARG Armored Vehicles Arms Control Arms Sales Arms Transfers Army Arnold Punaro Arrow Ashton Carter Asia Asia- Pacific Asia-Pacfic Pivot Asia-Pacific Asia-Pacific Pivot Asia-Pacific Region Asia-Pacific Strategy Assymetric Warfare AT-6 ATK AUSA Austal Australia AW609 AWACS B-52 Babcock & Wilcox BAE Systems BAE-EADS bail out Bain Capital BAMS Barack Obama Barbero Bath Iron Works BBP BCA Bechtel Beechcraft Benghazi Better Buying Power Bin Laden Bio-Engineering Biofuel Biohacker Biotechnology Black Hawk Blackhawk Bloomberg Bloomberg Business News BMD BMDR Boeing Bombers Boston BRAC Bradley Bradley Fighting Vehicle Britain British Military British Ministry of Defense Brookings Institution Brown budget Budget Control Act Budget Debate Budget Deficit Budget Drills Byron Callan C-130 C-17 C-2 C-5M CAPE Cargo Containers Cargo Screening Carrier Strike Group carriers CENTCOM Central Africa CH-47 Chabraja Chief Executive Officer China Chinook helicopter Chuck Hagel CIRCM climate change closing tank plant Cluster Bombs Cluster Munitions Coast Guard Collaborative Defense Comanche helicopter Commercial Space Common Infrared Countermeasures Common Vertical Lift Support Platform Communications Competitive Engagement Competitiveness Computer Sciences Corporation Concurrency Conflicts of Interest Congress Consolidation Constellation Contingency Support Contractors Continuing Resolution Contract Services Contracting Core Corzine cost Counterinsurgency Counterterrorism CRH Critical Enablers Critical Infrastructure Crowdsourcing Crusader artillery CSAR CTF Customer Pay CVLSP CVN CVN-78 CVN-91 Cyber cyber attack cyber defense cyber offense Cyber Security Cyber Threats Cyber Warfare Cybersecurity Cyberwar Cyberwarfare DARPA DB-110 DCAA DDG 1000 DDG-1000 DDG-51 debt Debt Agreement Defense Acquisistions Defense Acquisition System Defense Acquisitions Defense Budget Defense Business Board Defense Contract Requirements Defense Contractors Defense Contracts Defense Cuts Defense Downturn Defense Drawdown defense funding cut Defense Industrial Base Defense Industry Defense Planning Defense Priorities Defense Procurement Defense Sector Defense Spending Defense Stocks Defense Strategy Defense Weather Satellite System deficit Deficit Debate Deficit Reduction Delta Delta Air LInes Democrats Democrats & Defense Department of Defense Depot Depot Maintenance Depots Deputy Secretary Of Defense deterrence Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant DHS Dick Cheney Diversification DLA DOJ Donald Rumsfeld Dong Feng Dreamliner Drive down cost Drone Drones DRS Technologies DWSS DynCorp E-2 E-2D E-3 EA-18G EADS EASE Economic Growth Economic Recovery Economy Efficiency Drive Efficiency Initiative EFV Egypt EH101 EH-101 Elections Electric Grid Electric Power Grid Electronic Attack Electronic Warfare EMARSS energy security Energy Strategy Environmentalism EOTS EPA EPAA Erin Moseley ERP EU euro crisis Europe European Union eurozone EW Excaliber Exelis Ex-Im Bank Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle Export Controls Export Financing Export-Import Bank F/A-18 F117 F-15 F-16 F-22 F-35 F-35 engine F-35B FAA Fairfax County Fajr 5 rocket FCS Federal Reserve Fighter Sales Fincantieri Finmeccanica Fire Fighting Fire Resistant Environmental Ensemble fiscal cliff FMS FMTV Force Posture Force Protection Force Readiness Force Structure forcible entry Ford class Foreign Arms Sales Foreign Military Sales Forest Service Franco-British security FREE free speech Free Trade Future Combat System Future Combat Systems future warfare Gaddafi Gadhafi GAO Gates Gaza GBI GCV GE GEN III General Dynamics General Electric General Martin Dempsey General Mattis General McChrystal General Odierno General Schwartz GFE GISP Global Hawk Global Influence Global Strike Global Zero GMD GMR Goldman Sachs Gordon England Gorgon Stare Government Accountability Office GPS III Great Britain Greece Greyhound Ground Based Interceptor Ground Combat Vehicle Ground Mobile Radio Gun Control guns versus butter Hagel Hal Rogers Hamas Handheld Manpack Radio Hapag-Looyd HASC Hawker Beechcraft Hawkeye Healthcare Helicopters Heritage Foundation HH-60G High-Speed Rail HMS Homeland Defense Homeland Security Homeland Security Air Fleet Hu Jintao Human Spaceflight Humvee Huntington Ingalls Hybrid Drive Hybrid Strategies Hybrid Threat Hybrid Threats hybrid warfare Hypersonic Hypoxia ICBM IED Immelt Improvised Explosive Devices Incremental Funding India Industrial Base Industrial Policy Inherently Governmental Insitu Insourcing installations abroad Integrator Intellectual Property Intelligence Community IR&D Iran Iran Sanctions Iraq Iron Dome ISR Israel IT Providers ITT ITT Corporation ITT Defense J-20 Jacksonville Jammer Jammers Japan Jay Johnson Jay L. Johnson Jeffrey Immelt Jet Engines JFCOM JIEDDO JLENS JLTV Jobs Bill Joint Chiefs of Staff Joint Forces Command Joint Heavy Lift Joint Operating Environment Joint Stars Joint Strike Fighter Joint Tactical Radio System Jones Act JSTARS JTRS KBR KC-45 KC-46 KC-X Kent Kresa Kiowa Kiowa helicopter Korea L-3 Communications LAAR Lake City Larry Prior LAS LCAAP LCS LEMV Leon Panetta Libya Lieberman Life Cycle Costs Light Air Support Lima Lima Army Tank Plant Linda Gooden Linda Hudson lithium-ion batteries Littoral Combat Ship Lockheed Martin Logistics Long Endurance Multi-Intelligence Vehicle (LEMV) LRS LUH Lynn M1 M-1 Mabus Maersk maintenance MANPAD ManTech manufacturing Marillyn Hewson Marine Corps Marine Highway Initiative Marine One Marines Marinette Maritime Transport Mars Massachusetts M-ATV McNerney MDA MEADS MECV merger MEU MH-60 Michael O'Hanlon Middle East Middle East Unrest Mid-term election Military Military Communications military cuts Military Depots Military Electronics Military Pension Military Preparedness Military Readiness Military Retirement System Military Satellites Military Space Military Spending Military Strategy Military Vote Mine Countermeasures Mine Warfare Missile Defense Missile Defense Agency Missile Security Missile Tracking Satellite Mitt Romney MMPDS Modernization MPC MQ-9 MRAP MRC MRO Multiyear Contract Multiyear Procurement MV-22 NABCO NASA National Defense National Guard National Intelligence Estimate National Military Strategy National Research Council National Security National Security Appropriations Bill National Security Review National Security Strategy National Taxpayer Union NATO Navistar Navy Navy Acquisitions Navy Marine Corps Intranet Navy SEAL Navy SEALS NCADE NDAA Net Assessment NETCENTS Network-Centric Warfare Networks New Mexico New START Next Generation Enterprise Network Next Generation Jammer NGEN Nick Chabraja NIE NIFC-CA Nigeria NII Nimitz class NLOS-LS NLRB NMCI NMD Non-Proliferation Norm Dicks North Korea Northrop Grumman November Election NPR NRO NSA nuclear Nuclear Detection Nuclear Deterrence Nuclear Energy Nuclear Power Nuclear Reduction Nuclear Shipbuilding Nuclear strategy nuclear triad Nuclear Weapons Nunn-McCurdy O&M Obama Obamacare Odierno Office of Air and Marine OH-58 Ohio Ohio Class Ohio Replacement Oil O'Keefe OMB Operations and Maintenance Osama bin Laden Oshkosh Oshkosh Corporation Osprey Outsourcing overheating P.W. Singer P-8 P-8A PAA Pacfic Pacific Pakistan Panetta Partner Capacity Partnering Patriot Pave Hawk PBL Pentagon Pentagon Budget Pentagon Cuts Pentagon Spending PEO Soldier Perchlorate Performance Based Logistics Performance-Based Agreement Performance-Based Logistics Persian Gulf Phalanx Phased Adaptive Approach Phased Adaptive Architecture Pilot Training PLA Navy Poseidon Pratt & Whitney Predator Presidential Helicopter Private Contractors Procurement PSSD PTSS Public Interest Research Group Public Private Partnership Public-Private Partnership Public-Private Partnerships Pyongyang QDR QHSR Raider Rapid Equipping Force Rapid Fielding Initiative Rare Earth Ray Mabus Raytheon Readiness Reaper Rebalancing Reconnaissance Helicopter Reelection REF Regulatory Burden Republicans Reset Restart F- 22 RFI Richard Aboulafia Rifleman RIMPAC Rivet Joint RMD 802 Robert Gates Robert O. Work Robert Stevens Rocket Industry Rocket Motors Rocketdyne Rolls-Royce Romney Ron Epstein RPV RQ-170 RQ-4 RQ-7 Rules of Engagement Russia S-300 S-97 SAIC Samsung satellite Satellites Saxby Chambliss SBINet SBIRS Scan Eagle Seapower Secretary Donley Secretary Gates Section 808 Sentinel Sequestration Shadow ship building Shipbuilding Should Cost Methodology Sierra Nevada Sierra Nevada Corporation Sikorsky Situational Awareness SLAMRAAM SM-3 Smart Defense Smart Defense Initiative SOF Soft Power Solar Electric Propulsion Soldier As A System Soldier Equipment solid rocket motor SOSCOE South Korea Space Space Based Infared System space disaggregation Space Launch Space Shuttle Space Tracking and Surveillance Satellite SpaceX Space-X Special Operations Special Operations Forces SSBN SSBN(X) Standard Missile Standard Missile 3 START START Treaty Stealth Helicopter Steel Strait of Hormuz Strategic Architecture strategic arms control Strategic Arms Treaty Strategic Review Stryker STUAS submarine Submarines Subsidies Super Committee Super Galaxay Super Hornet Supply Chain Supply Chain Management Sustainable Defense Sustainment swing states Switchblade Syria T-38 T-38 Trainer Tactical Communications Taiwan Taliban Tanker Tankers Tea Party Teal Group Technical Data terror terrorism Testing Requirements Textron THAAD The Economist Theater Express Tiltrotor Tilt-rotor TLSP Trade Deficit Trade Policy Trade Subsidies Transformation Trident Trident submarine Troop Reduction Turkey Tysons Corner U.K. U.N. Investigation U.S. Army U.S. embassy in Cairo U.S. Manufacturing U.S. Navy U.S. Strategy U-2 UAS UAV UAVs UCLASS UH-1Y UH-60 UK United Kingdom United Technologies Unmanned Aerial System Unmanned Aerial Systems Unmanned Aerial Vehicles unmanned air systems (UASs) Unmanned Aircraft Urgent Operational Needs US Ports US101 USFS USS Missouri Utah V-22 V-22 Osprey Vertical Lift Virginia Virginia-class submarine WAPS war War On Terror WARN Washington Weapons Programs Weapons Spending Wes Bush WGS White House Transparency Measure Wichita Wideband Global Satcom Wikileaks William Perry WIN-T World Trade Organization WTO Yemen York
<< Previous
Next >>

How Greece Mortgaged Its Financial Future


While the world awaits the outcome of Greek parliamentary elections on June 17 -- which will determine whether the country remains in the eurozone -- it is important to understand how a country of 11 million people could accumulate such a colossal debt in the first place. Greece found itself at the bottom of a deep fiscal hole due to political-party overpromises of public spending and a deal signed between the Greek Finance Ministry and Goldman Sachs in 2001 allowing the country to legally fudge its debt percentages to enter the eurozone.

Since the fall of the Greek military dictatorship in 1974, political parties have used the public sector to maintain power. Pasok and New Democracy are the political parties that are held accountable since one of the two political parties has been in power since the 1974 rise of the Third Hellenic Republic. Pasok and New Democracy leaders have repeatedly promised public-sector employees lifetime jobs (equivalent tenure of Supreme Court justices in the United States) with generous pension plans which inevitably led to a steady rise in the number of public-sector employees. In Greece, the public sector is a much more desirable workplace than the private sector. Efforts to increase efficiency and competition in the private sector have been undermined so that the government can leverage public-sector employment for maximum power.

Greece agreed to abide by debt and budget ratio rules in the Maastricht Treaty that created the European Union when it joined the eurozone on June 19, 2000. According to those rules, member countries’ debt cannot exceed 60 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) and budget deficits cannot exceed three percent of GDP. On October 6, 2009, Bank of Greece Governor George Pavropoulous reported a shocking budget deficit of 10 percent of GDP – known as the “proton pseudos,” the original lie that eroded trust and solidarity in the EU. Greece’s deficit is the highest reported by any member country in two decades since the beginning of the euro project. A few days after the original report, Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou disclosed that the projected deficit would increase further to about 15.8 percent of GDP in 2010 and blamed his estimate on the global recession, fiscal problems (overestimated tax revenues, excessive public spending), and “hidden” financial mis-steps committed by the previous government.

At the time, Pasok Prime Minister George Papandreou and Finance Minister Papaconstantinou claimed they were unaware of the deficit problem. This is unlikely to be true because former Prime Minister Karamanlis (in power before Papandreou) allowed the public debt to increase by 50 percent between the years of 2005 and 2009 from 200 billion euros (100 percent of GDP) to 300 billion euros. How could former Prime Minister Papandreou run a campaign based on the slogan “There is money available” when he was not even sure this was true? The answer is easy: his focus was on winning the election instead of being honest about the country’s impending financial disaster with Greek citizens. Ironically, his tenure demonstrated the exact opposite of his campaign theme: there was no money available and the country owed more than it could reasonably hope to pay back. His resignation was an admission of how dire the situation had become.

Unfortunately, the behavior of former Prime Ministers Karamanlis and Papandreou is the norm in Greek politics, and this custom is what has torn the country into economic shreds. While Karamanlis and Papandreou are well-known for their over-spending promises, former Prime Minister Kostas Simitis carried fiscal irresponsibility to an even higher level when he signed a backroom deal with Wall Street investment bank Goldman Sachs -- a deal considered by some as one of the greatest secrets in European history.

Deficit restrictions motivated countries with the desire to enter the eurozone to decrease public deficits. Just like other countries, Greece decreased its public deficits, but used a special arrangement to do so. In 2000 the Greek Finance Ministry signed a cross-currency swap deal with Goldman Sachs that transferred some of the country’s public debt into other currencies, dollars and yen, which hid its true deficit amount. Currency swaps are a common tool used by governments to protect against changes in currency value, and European accounting rules do not require a country to reflect this information on their balance sheets. However, Greece and Goldman Sachs’ deal was unique in the sense that it allowed the agreement to function as a loan from Goldman Sachs to Greece due to an “historical implied foreign exchange rate.” In other words, the exchange rate that was used when the deal was signed was not the value at that time; the value was based on a weaker euro rate that allowed Greece to exchange its yen and dollars for a substantial amount of euros. Greece borrowed approximately one billion dollars from this deal and Goldman Sachs instantly made over 200 million dollars plus future accumulated interest. Both the bank and the Greek Finance Ministry have declined to issue a statement on this deal. In essence, the Greek government and Finance Ministry mortgaged the nation’s future.

So it is easy to understand why a 2010 report from Transparency International, a global anti-corruption organization, rated Greece at the bottom in terms of government honesty and competence, and why Greek citizens are protesting in the streets with fury and passion. Leaders in Athens cared more about their power and lining their own pockets than the torture the nation must now endure to pay for public overspending. Greece needs a reformed political culture and a fresh government that represents the people rather than the interests of a corrupt elite.

Constance Baroudos, M.A.

Return to Early Warning Blog
<< Previous
Next >>
1600 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 900
Arlington, VA 22209
P: 703-522-5828 | F: 703-522-5837
©2009 Lexington Institute. All Rights Reserved.
Website designed by Borcz:Dixon | Powered by Agency of Record