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WELCOME TO THE POISONED CHALICE by James K. Galbraith

WELCOME TO THE POISONED CHALICE

The Destruction of Greece and the Future of Europe

by James K. Galbraith

Pub Date: June 21st, 2016
ISBN: 978-0-300-22044-5
Publisher: Yale Univ.

A series of essays, letters, and other documents examining the latest Greek tragedy.

Is it possible to save the eurozone? Given the events that have settled on Greece, suggests acclaimed economist Galbraith (Chair, Government/Business Relations/Univ. of Texas; Inequality: What Everyone Needs to Know, 2016, etc.), the odds weigh against it; it seems likelier “that the euro will, at some point, in some country, crack.” In one view, the drama of Greece, beset by creditors and pushed into unwonted and unwanted austerity, is merely a “side effect of the global banking and financial disaster” that began to steamroll its way across the world in 2007—a disaster that had its origins in sloppy American fiscal practices and that took down many other economies with it. In another view, it is a continuation of indifferent, occasionally hostile relations between Greece and other European nations, which treat it as an unwelcome guest at the banquet. Galbraith writes sometimes as a journalist, sometimes as a policy analyst, sometimes as an outright advocate for Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek economist and liberal politician who has been leading a resistance movement against European Union–imposed austerity programs that disregard certain Greek realities—e.g., the facts that it has an aging population with a poor system of unemployment insurance as well as “one of Europe’s most militant working classes,” not likely to be compliant with the directives of German banks and Belgian bureaucrats. The breakup of the eurozone, writes the author, might not be an altogether bad thing. And in the place of the euro? It’s anyone’s guess, but Galbraith reminds us that after the gold standard collapsed, Bretton Woods came along, and the world did not end.

A book best read by policy wonks of a numerate bent but accessible to noneconomists as well.