Greek
debt crisis: 'Who will trust Germany after this?' asks Paul Krugman
ALEXANDER SEHMER
Monday 13 July 2015 /
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/greek-debt-crisis-who-will-trust-germany-after-this-asks-paul-krugman-10384402.html
Paul Krugman, the
Nobel Prize-winning economist, made his feelings about the demands of
Greece's European creditors known when he asked: "Who will ever
trust Germany’s good intentions after this?"
In his blog,
published in the New York Times before eurozone leaders announced
they had reached a compromise agreement on Monday morning, Krugman
suggested German demands over Greece were "killing the European
project".
As European leaders
struggled to reach an agreement on Greece, one that would allow for
talks aimed at securing a third bailout, Germany emerged as the
fiscal hardliner, demanding cast-iron guarantees that Athens would
observe stringent austerity measures.
France and Italy
appeared to offer some resistance to Germany late in the day, with
Mario Draghi, the Italian head of the European Central Bank, thought
to be most opposed to cutting Greece loose from the euro.
Krugman, who has
been a vocal supporter of Europe and a critic of austerity, called a
list of European demands "madness", saying they went
"beyond harsh into pure vindictiveness".
Paul Krugman Krugman
has been a vocal supporter of the 'European project' (Getty) "It
is, presumably, meant to be an offer Greece can't accept; but even
so, it's a grotesque betrayal of everything the European project was
supposed to stand for," he wrote.
Krugman also lent
impetus to the Twitter hashtag #ThisIsACoup, which dominated social
media attached to tens of thousands of angry comments denouncing
German-inspired proposals for EU-directed reforms of Greece's public
administration.
The hashtag appeared
to originate on Sunday evening from Sandro Maccarrone, who describes
himself as a physics teacher from Barcelona.
He tweeted: "The
Eurogroup proposal is a covert coup d'etat against the Greek people.
#ThisIsACoup."
Within hours it had
been used nearly 200,000 times.
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