What the Doomsayers Haven’t Been Telling You about Greece

The recent battle over healthcare reform in the United States, in which the Obama administration was barely able to pass weak reform, is just further proof of how far the US has fallen behind Europe. Yet all the media has been able to obsess over for the last couple of months is – the Greek debt crisis!

By now of course everyone knows that Greece is in really tough shape, right? Practically at the cliff’s edge, ready to collapse? All the gloom and doomers have been telling us this for two months, so it must be true. But before we pronounce it so, let’s take a quick pop quiz:

Which country has less inequality, Greece or the United States? Which country has lower rates of infant mortality, Greece or the United States? Which country has greater age longevity and more affordable university education? Which country has a lower homicide rate and about one-tenth the number of people in prison, Greece or the United States? Which country has a lower rate of teenage births and lower rates of drug use? Which country emits far fewer carbon emissions per capita? Which country has affordable, universal health care for all its people, and pays about half as much money per person to receive it – Greece or the United States?

Surprisingly, the answer to all those questions is: Greece. Certainly Greece is going through a difficult spot in its long history, but how difficult depends on how you measure it. In some very important ways Greece is doing better than the United States (which also is saddled with enormous government deficits, as is virtually every country in the world, due to stimulus spending designed to jumpstart national economies after the global collapse).

Why then is gloom and doom all we hear about Greece, 24-7? A good part of the reason is ideological. With US government deficits soaring, conservatives from the teabaggers to Fox News to Senate Republicans are sounding the alarm about a return to ‘big government’. Recently, former GOP presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani even stated that President Obama was moving the US towards – gasp – European socialism.

For conservatives like Giuliani, Glenn Beck and others, ‘Europe’ is a code word for ‘big government’, ‘high taxes’ and more recently ‘big deficits’. When they bash Europe they are really taking aim at government in the United States. All this talk of Greece – a small country that makes up only 2% of Europe’s economy – is being used to attack the Obama administration and its stimulus spending and budget deficits. ‘The US will end up like Greece!’ has become one of the conservatives’ rallying cries.

A second ideological front is glimpsed when you realise that most of the analysts and reporters are looking at this, not from the point of view of everyday Greeks, but from that of the bankers and bonds traders, and the investment class in general. The Electronic Investor Herd is skittish that they might not get paid back the money they have loaned to Greece. And most of the reportage on Greece’s situation comes from media outlets owned by corporations that reflect the commercial interests of its owners.

But from the average Greek person’s perspective, it matters little if Greece defaults on its debt or instead manages to roll over that debt at a high interest rate. Either way, Greece is going to have to enact austerity measures, and that will be a hardship for its people. Greece has been living beyond its means, rolling up deficit after deficit, and the bill has come due. In a country where many are able to retire at the age of 50 or 55, while the Germans are raising their retirement age to 67, this is not terribly surprising.

Even with Portugal’s economy (which is smaller than Greece’s) possibly added to the mix, this crisis has been manageable for the European Union. It’s not as if Europe is the only place suffering the aftershocks of the global economic earthquake that shook the world in 2008. California makes up 14% of the American economy, truly too big to fail, and had to issue IOUs to pay its bills and prevent default. California has been slashing social programmes and government jobs, and is being swamped by foreclosed homes. So why are we are hearing more about Greece than California? Because Greece has more rattled the investor class and the slavish corporate media that reflects its interests.

What’s more surprising is how much progressive media outlets also have echoed this simplistic ‘bad Greece’ storyline. Whether on NPR, the Huffington Post, or various European news outlets, many commentators have unleashed Greece-bashing tirades that have fed into the hysteria. Prominent among them has been Simon Johnson, a MIT professor and former International Monetary Fund economist who has departed from his usually sober and insightful analyses to become increasingly shrill with over-the-top gloom and doom predictions.

So Greece makes for a convenient punching bag for those who wish to score ideological points. If there’s any hope of ever having a more progressive government in the United States, we have to unwind this ‘government is evil’ conversation. Greece is just the latest episode in this longstanding, American-led Europe-bashing. Here is a sampling of the numerous gloom and doom headlines that have appeared in US media outlets in recent years, trumpeting the imminent collapse of Europe:

‘The End of Europe’; ‘Europe Isn’t Working’; ‘Will Europe Ever Work?’; ‘What’s Wrong with Europe’; ‘The Decline and Fall Of Europe’; ‘Old Europe Unprepared for New Battles’; ‘Western Europe Is Cursed’; ‘Reforms in Europe Needed’; ‘Is Europe Dying?’; ‘The Rise of the Fortress Continent’; ‘The Decline of France’; ‘Political Crisis Paralyzing Europe’; ‘Europe’s Long Vacation Is Ending’; ‘Why America Outpaces Europe’; and ‘Europe Turns Back the Clock’.

These alarming headlines appeared from 2003 until late 2006, when – surprise, surprise – it was discovered that the European economy actually was surging past the US economy. In fact, an article published in the international version of Newsweek on November 20, 2006, blared the headline ‘The Great Job Machine: Despite Its Laggard Reputation, Europe Continues to Grow Faster, and Create More Jobs, than America’ – yet that story never appeared in the domestic version of Newsweek.

Just as the media misreported weapons of mass destruction and completely missed an $8 trillion housing bubble, it frequently misreports Europe. The ideologically slanted US media continue to shield Americans from injections of reality that are badly needed to understand their country’s relative standing in the world. Even the reporting on street protests in Greece has been tinged with alarmist depictions calculated to scare Americans about Europe. I believe it’s a good sign that the Greeks are fighting to preserve their social contract from the marauding of the banks, the bonds traders and their previous governments that indebted them and then hid the debt with the help of Goldman Sachs. What I find truly worrying is that Californians, as well as their fellow Americans, are taking all of this lying down. There seems to be little fight in the American people, despite the lost ground.

And if there is little fight left in that Spirit of 1776 – and on top of that Americans don’t value government very much – they are never going to push for the adoption of better policies in which a smart and progressive government plays its suitable role, defined via the rough and tumble of politics.

Steven Hill is author of the recently published ‘Europe’s Promise: Why the European Way is the Best Hope in an Insecure Age’ (www.EuropesPromise.org).

No related posts.

About Steven Hill

Steven Hill is a political writer and former director of the Political Reform Program at the New America Foundation. His most recent book, Europe’s Promise: Why the European Way Is the Best Hope for an Insecure Age (www.EuropesPromise.org), was published in January 2010. His previous books include 10 Steps to Repair American Democracy (2006); Fixing Elections: The Failure of America’s Winner Take All Politics (2003); and Whose Vote Counts (with Rob Richie, 2001). His articles and commentaries have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Guardian, Financial Times, International Politik and many other leading publications. His blog 'Dispatches from Europe' is hosted by Washington Monthly.

Comments

  1. THOMAS FARR says:

    this is a superb article and want to e-mail to a bunch of doomsayer Republican friends. need to know best
    way to do that. thanks , Tom .

  2. Molly says:

    I don’t know what proportion of Greece’s deficit is the result of ‘stimulus spending designed to jumpstart national economies after the global collapse’ but I know that the overwhelming majority of the UK’s deficit – and that of the US as well I think – is the result of the massive transfer of our wealth to the banks and their stockholders. Although the media seeks to imply that the deficit spending was for the public benefit, to keep us out of 1930s style Depression, we should not forget that most has been directly transferred into bank profits and bonuses, unless for those of us who are unfortunate enough to have massive financial sectors.

  3. Jason W says:

    Really don’t have much of a clue what you’re talking about do you author? Yes, America is in a shithole of a situation right now; but you think that health care “reform” was actually productive?

    Why don’t you actually read the bill (or law, now) and see what it actually does. There is no government health care, there is only a mandate stating that people MUST have health care or else they get a huge fine. Guess what… we have to get this health care from the same companies that fucked us in the first place.

    Simple matter of fact: Too many fat, lazy, unproductive, hyper-entitled assholes in this country popping out a truckload of kids so they can live on the government tit. Sort of like France.

  4. european says:

    Oh, hello there, I notice that you very pointedly fail to mention corruption and nepotism in your article. As to costs for university education it’s not really any secret than any greek who can afford it goes to england or the united states to study because greek universities are rife with strikes and communist propaganda… Greece is a country full of tax-evaders, anarchist ghettos and farmers. Good work trying to make them look like poor schmucks caught in a bad situation. This kind of frivolous spending and book-cooking has been going on since these self-content bums got let into the eu in the first place.
    So stop trying to cook the statistics. Get your facts straight!

  5. Alvin says:

    Living in Greece, I can share a few observations related to some of the points made in this laughable article…

    Any greek who can afford it stays well away from public healthcare and goes to private doctors, clinics and hospitals.

    As for social equality, take a look at how Greece’s immigrant population is treated (particularily the africans and south asians), and notice the complete lack of social mobility. Without an uncle in a high up position, your abilities count for nothing in Greece’s job market.

    What makes Greece a pleasant country is the weather, traditions, landscape, islands, history and lifestyle – but the bureaucratic government and rampant cronyism are horrible and crush the human soul.

    If you really do want the US to go the way of Greece though, comrade Obama is your man!

  6. Dominic says:

    Oh dear, reactionary yanks have made it to Social Europe Journal!

  7. Anna Syngellakis says:

    Just in case it has escaped people's attention…

  8. George Irvin says:

    An excellent piece, but of course, there are many lessons Europe can learn from the US too, including the need to think less in terms of 'state's rights' and more in terms of proper federalism!

Trackbacks

  1. What the Doomsayers Haven’t Been Telling You about Greece http://bit.ly/9FmlKK

  2. JSS says:

    Kas mums nav ticis izst?st?ts par Grie?iju http://tinyurl.com/griekija

  3. K.ristaps says:

    RT @JSS_Latvia: Kas mums nav ticis izst?st?ts par Grie?iju http://tinyurl.com/griekija

  4. RT @JSS_Latvia: Kas mums nav ticis izst?st?ts par Grie?iju http://tinyurl.com/griekija

  5. SEJ: What the Doomsayers Haven’t Been Telling You about Greece http://bit.ly/bIoZhR #SocioTweets

  6. What the Doomsayers Haven’t Been Telling You about Greece | Social Europe Journal http://goo.gl/TUtd

  7. RobKelley says:

    The 'Bad Greece' meme analyzed -"What the Doomsayers Haven’t Been Telling You about Greece" http://tinyurl.com/2ejghn5