Two different paths for Greece 
  Optimists and pessimists see contrasting scenarios regarding the response by Greeks to increasing problems  
By Dimitris Kontogiannis - Kathimerini English Edition
Greece's success in meeting the targets of the economic policy  program next year will depend on social tolerance and the ability of the  private sector to withstand the recessionary forces unleashed by the  public sector and put a brake on the economy's three-year slide.
Optimists  believe Greece will pull it off, as they expect the government to stick  to the European Commission / International Monetary Fund memorandum and  the public not to react differently than in other countries  experiencing a protracted recession. On the other hand, pessimists  expect social unrest and political developments to challenge the  implementation of the program. Both cannot be right.
With the  financial crisis - which began in Greece last spring - engulfing Ireland  and threatening to pull down Portugal and potentially even Spain, thus  endangering the euro, the challenges for Greece are even greater than  before. It looks increasingly likely that the country will not find  enough global investors willing to buy its bonds at reasonable yields at  best, if not at all, in the next couple of years as envisaged by the  economic policy program agreed with the EC, the ECB and the IMF last  May.
Nevertheless, the government will have to implement the  program in an increasingly difficult domestic environment, as the  economy enters its third downward year with rising unemployment and more  shops and companies shutting down. It is more difficult, because the  only ray of hope is coming from the external sector with slumping  imports on the back of depressed consumption and investment, and a  modest pick up in exports on improved foreign demand and falling wages.
With  no concrete plans to prop up the economy during its soft spot, the  sense of disappointment by bankers and businessmen appears to be  stronger than a month ago.
Still, structural reforms may be indeed  an effective way to boost the economy's competitiveness and the  potential gross domestic product growth rate in the medium-to-long term  but they usually do not help much in the short-term. Conversely, such  measures to make the social security system more viable and the labor  market more flexible usually entail short-term economic and social  costs, exacerbating the negative side effects of the recession.
According  to pessimists in different industries, the evolving fallout from the  restrictive incomes and fiscal policies implemented so far will combine  with the costs of the structural measures in the next few months,  producing an explosive cocktail.
So, they think social unrest and a  sharp rise in crime will be the consequences, paving the way for  political developments, including a call for general elections. They are  almost certain of a new wave of shops and small businesses shutting  down after the upcoming holiday season, adding tens of thousands to the  ranks of the unemployed. Some think the government may foresee such  events and seek a new mandate and a new four-year term before April.
On  the other hand, optimists take a more positive view of future  developments, starting from the thesis that the government has no choice  but to implement the fiscal and structural policies spelled out in the  EC/IMF/ECB memorandum, as if it doesn't, Greece will not receive the  next tranche of the 110-billion-euro bailout loan and will not be able  to pay the salaries of the army of civil servants.
Optimists  believe the great majority of the Greek public has understood the  severity of the situation and will not react in a disorderly way.  Moreover, they think trade union leaders are discredited and since many  of them belong to the ruling party they will obey party orders.
Optimists  also point to the lack of social unrest in other countries, such as  Latvia and Ireland, which implemented fiscal austerity measures and had  their economy contract more and longer than Greece. So, they expect the  majority of the population to abstain from unruly demonstrations and  other such events, pointing to the way Greeks have accepted the  austerity and structural measures taken so far.
It is hard to say  which side is right. Time will show. One thing is sure though. If the  public sector pulls down the private sector, the economy will suffer  more than projected and the pendulum will swing to the pessimists' side.
(Kathimerini.gr)
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Anche in Grecia è aperta la gara tra ottimisti e pessimisti ...