Having misspent EU funds intended for a "Hellenic Cultural Centre" on a lame Brazilian football player, local big-wig and businessman Vasilis Arvanitakis aims to hoodwink a delegation of EU auditors dispatched to assess, ten years later, how their money had been invested. Sotiris Goritsas' bitter comedy Braziliero (2001) should have been required viewing for EU officials dealing with Greece. As in Gogol's The Government Inspector, all the usual suspects are there: the foppish inspectors, the businessman, a leftwing politician, local media operators, corrupt policemen, the local football team, a long-suffering wife, the wronged lover... Now, ten years later and more than ten years too late, the time has come to re-evaluate EU policies towards Greece. Like the inspectors, we'd like to know where all the money went. And what the current mix of EU/IMF policies will mean for ordinary Greeks in their attempt to survive economic depression and societal breakdown.
Doing justice to the interwoven strands of Greece's post-1981 history, the accelerating EU debt crisis and the distortionary effects of the euro on the competitiveness of EU states remains beyond the scope of the present inquiry. Instead, what will be examined is the impact of development aid distributed by the EU to Greece over the past three decades. Dispersed for the most part through the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and the Structural and Cohesion Funds, EU aid – equal to over 3 per cent of annual Greek GDP – was intended to shape Greece's future. EU support was intended to ensure that development would be sustainable and meet "the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs".[1] Already in the Maastricht Treaty (1992), the EU undertook to promote "balanced and harmonious development" with "respect the environment". The Amsterdam Treaty (1999) went further, calling for a "balanced and sustainable development of economic activities". The question of sustainability goes to the political and economic heart of the crisis in Greece today. What went wrong? What should the EU be doing differently, given the magnitude of the current crisis?
Learning from mistakes?
The management, or rather the mismanagement, of the CAP in Greece is a
story in itself. Cotton production, for example, was subsidised by the
CAP on the basis of crop output. When demand for water in Thessaly (the
main cotton producing area) increased, the Greek government tabled plans
for a series of dams that would divert 1.5 billion m3 of water, later reduced to 600 million m3,
from western Greece. Though the Acheloos diversion did initially
receive EU structural aid, this was cancelled in the absence of proper
environmental feasibility studies. Nonetheless, despite losing a string
of court cases to NGOs and residents of affected areas, the Greek
government insisted that the diversion should proceed. Work on the
diversion has been underway since the late 1980s, though with
significant breaks due to court interventions. When, in 2000, the
Council of State (the highest judicial authority in Greece) revoked the
ministerial approval of the environmental conditions of the project, the
diversion was simply separated into smaller interlinking segments and
continued with renewed vigour.[2] Though
EU structural funding was withheld, it was EU cotton subsidies that
provided the impetus for the diversion. Instead of funding cotton
production, the EU could have co-funded the shift to alternative and
sustainable forms of agricultural production in Thessaly. Moreover,
given budgetary constraints, every euro spent on by the Greek state on
the diversion potentially meant the loss of one euro of EU matching
funding to any alternative (EU approved) investment. Although opinion
polls in 2005 and 2007 revealed a significant majority to be against the
diversion, in the context of corruption in Greece it made perfect
sense. EU agricultural subsidies created a powerful voting block with
vested interests in the status quo; construction companies working on
the diversion channelled part of their profits into ensuring positive
media coverage for politicians in favour of the project, such as the
Environment and Public Works Minister George Souflias. Agricultural
subsidies contributed to transforming farmers into bureaucrats, who then
used their political clout – along with more direct methods such as
blocking travel arteries – to demand further subsidies. Yet despite
increasing farming incomes in the short term, EU agricultural subsidies
have not succeeded in fostering the development of high value,
export-orientated goods.
Structural and Cohesion Funds have predominately been directed towards
investment in physical capital (tangible assets such as roads,
buildings, machinery, ports, airports, etc.). Some of these, such as the
port of Linara on Skyros, are clearly white elephants. Many of the
sewage-treatment facilities built with EU aid are not operational. The
correct decision to fund the creation of a national cadastre in the
1990s was undermined by financial mismanagement on a grand scale, with
Greece eventually losing more than 1 billion euros in allocated funding.
Greek dependence on EU aid meant that increasing the absorption rate
(i.e. the level of spending in relation to the total amount of
structural funds available) became an end in itself, with effective
investment only a secondary concern. EU support was thus directed
towards easy and politically advantageous projects, particularly road
building, that had the potential to cause significant environmental
damage. Despite such projects, public sector inefficiency resulted in
low rates of absorption.
Greece's entry into the euro served to consolidate a development path
characterised by investment in physical capital. Dramatically lower
interest rates and access to cheap credit led to an unsustainable boom
in construction and consumption. Spending on facilities for the Olympic
Games constituted the apogee of this delirium. The construction of the
rowing centre at Marathon, to cite but one example, cost twice the
amount of a proposed alternative rowing centre northwest of Athens,
simultaneously placing a Natura 2000 wetland under even greater threat.
As Ioli Christopoulou has argued in her study of the impact of
Structural and Cohesion funds in Greece, EU funds served to promote a
particular growth model. "The view of the Commission that infrastructure
investments are to be prioritised among structural investments has
trickled down to the national and regional levels influencing selected
funding priorities".[3]
Attention to the environment may, she claims, have increased over the
years, yet actual spending remains largely unchanged. Despite the
current crisis, many mistakes from the past are being repeated in the
present.
Build and be damned
Constrained by Greece's inability to devalue, the EU-IMF plan is
composed of a number of interlinking measures: increasing tax revenue,
decreasing expenditure, liberalising the economy, restructuring the
state apparatus. However, raising revenue through the privatisation of
land and attempting to stimulate the economy through construction has
negative implications for Greece's social and economic development in
the long-term.
The IMF "Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies" has forecast 50 billion euros in revenues from privatisation.[4] The target date for raising this sum was originally 2015, later revised
to 2017. After a tragically slow start, Greece's privatisation fund
(TAIPED) has recently been moving swiftly to prepare state assets for
privatisation; nevertheless, the legal contracts binding corporations
such as the Public Gas Company (DEPA) are causing inevitable delays. The
total value of assets, excluding land, that Greece can easily privatise
remains unclear: estimates vary from 13 billion euros to approximately
20 billion. The remaining sum is supposed to be made up through the sale
of state land, largely for commercial and touristic development. This
will involve the sale of coastal land and perhaps even heritage sites on
an unprecedented scale. Since this would, in certain cases, be
unconstitutional and thus likely to be objected to, legislation has been
passed allowing the leasing of state land to developers for a hundred
years.
However, market fears of a departure from the eurozone and the absence
of credit have so far hindered far-reaching privatisation. Until the
fate of the euro is clarified, investors will be loath to take risks on
the Greek market. To cite but one example, the privatisation fund had to
postpone the deadline for expressions of interest even in highly
profitable assets such as the gaming company OPAP. With the exception of
the Elliniko, Athens' former airport, which was to have become a park
catering for the capital with the least green areas in Europe, the
privatisation of state land has so far not progressed from the
legislation to the implementation stage. The latest IMF report concedes
that "if market conditions do not improve, sales would have to be spread
over a longer period of time, with program targets re-calibrated
further".[5]
Further legislation related to the construction sector was passed
without any consultation process as an addendum to the Greek government
budget in August 2011. This facilitates construction in areas designated
as outside town zoning limits. Owners of 15 hectares are henceforth
allowed to build on up to 35 per cent of the land at their disposal.
Despite constitutional objections, legislation allowing for the
legalisation of illegal homes is already in place and being implemented.
In October 2011, 95 per cent of the "Green Fund" was incorporated by
law into the central government budget; along with many other things,
funding for the protection of Greece's forests came from this fund.
Clearly, the purpose of these measures is to generate revenue and reduce
expenditure on environmental protection. According to Elena Panariti, a
PASOK MP and former World Bank economist, Greek government policy
should aim to reduce the gap between formal rules and informal
procedures. On this understanding, illegal structures (buildings etc.)
and practices should be legalised and thus incorporated into the
official economy.[6] This would inaugurate a period of rapid economic development, along
lines that have been tested in other peripheral countries, particularly
Latin America. Miranda Xafa, an influential liberal economic thinker and
formerly a member of the board of the IMF, adds the proviso that
"achieving 50 billion euros in revenues is only realistic if state land
is privatised; such privatisation, however, is tightly correlated to
growth".[7]
Opposition to some of the measures has been considerable albeit
underreported. Greek NGOs (e.g. the Sustainable Aegean Programme of
Elliniki Etaireia, Etaireia Prostasias tis Fysis, WWF Greece and others)
have been arguing that Spain, which has up to 700,000 unsold properties
along its coasts, shows that the demand for second homes does not
necessarily exist. Property bubbles in Ireland and the US have also
revealed the perils of a development policy based on construction.
Greece, with over 15 per cent of its GDP dependent on tourism, must
preserve its natural and cultural environment. Despite the crisis,
tourism was up 10 per cent in 2011, proving to be one of the few growth
areas in Greece's economy. Widespread construction would not make the
Greek economy more productive; on the contrary, it would eliminate one
of the few sources of productivity that Greece has so far relied on.
Furthermore, the tidal wave of policies fostering construction mean that
the Greek state will in fact be competing against itself: laws
facilitating construction on private land outside zoning areas
necessarily reduce revenue from the privatisation of state land. The
elimination of the "Green Fund", in combination with measures legalising
illegality, are likely to lead to a surge in forest fires akin to those
in 2009 and, given the lack of an adequate cadastre in many parts of
the country, to land-grabbing. Legal proceedings against government
legislation have, however, not yet progressed, since constitutional
appeals can be raised not at the legislation per se, but against
executive decisions on a case-by-case basis. Given the inefficiency of
Greece's legal system, the resolution of legal battles should not be
expected any time soon.
On a party-political level, Tina Birbili, an ally of the former Prime
Minister George Papandreou and Greece's first ever Minister of the
Environment, was sacked in June 2011 as an obstacle to policies
promoting construction; Synaspismos and the Democratic Left have been up
in arms. Nikos Chrysogelos, an environmental activist and Green
councillor for the South Aegean who led the Greek Green Party (Oikologoi
Prasinoi) in the last parliamentary elections, has focused on the
consequences of such policies for climate change, a field that has
dominated European Environmental policy: "The Aegean is an extremely
water-scarce region and the islands very sensitive ecosystems. The mass
construction of new buildings on the islands will contribute to an
extreme rise in energy consumption and liquid and solid waste
production, not to mention the operational cost of the necessary
infrastructure for the local communities." He adds: "How can policies
such as these be implemented at the behest of the EU without even basic
environmental planning?"[8]
A large number of local councillors from the Aegean regions of Greece
have signed a petition against government policies encouraging second
home construction.[9]
The liberal MEP Theodoros Skylakakis (Dimokratiki Symachia) has argued
that, environmental concerns aside, the measures represent an additional
threat to the Greek banking system, which holds much of its collateral
in property; mass construction would reduce the value of this
collateral.[10] These parties' influence is limited, however. And while the MEP and
economist Kritonas Arsenis (PASOK) has waged a press campaign against a
developmental model based on the construction of holiday homes, he has
found himself isolated within his party. The perception fostered by the
major political parties that Greece is de facto no longer a
sovereign nation with regard to its economic and environmental policy
might explain why people despair at the myriad changes taking place
around them.
From democracy to imperium
The EU-IMF policy-makers currently overseeing the Greek government face a
complicated situation. Greece is insolvent. It is in the midst of a
depression, GDP having dropped over 15 per cent over three years and
projected to keep falling. It is running a primary budget deficit of
approximately 10 per cent of GDP in 2011, down, but nowhere near target.
The government has been forced to announce new packages of austerity
measures in a bid to save extra billions, yet revenues consistently fall
below expectations. "Voluntary" debt reduction schemes create
insolvency problems for Greek and European banks, which therefore reduce
credit supply, requiring additional support to prevent the onset of
ever wider economic crises. And then there are the social consequences
in a country already facing an unemployment rate of at least an 18 per
cent, an increase of 5 per cent in one year, according to figures that
many consider conservative. Crime, disease, suicide rates and
homelessness have also rocketed.
Greeks feel trapped. Unless they are willing to accept a massive and
immediate reduction of their standard of living, potentially worsening
the social situation to breaking point, people have no other option but
to follow the policy diktats of the EU-IMF in return for irregular doses
of "memorandum" cash. Opinion polls show that, for the moment, the
majority of Greeks are still prepared to take this course, if only for
fear of the consequences of leaving the euro. However, parties opposed
to the "memorandum" of the EU and the IMF are on the rise, already
garnering almost as much support as PASOK and ND combined. Regardless of
whether parliamentary elections are held in February 2012, there is
likely to be an increase in nationalism and anarchy, with unpredictable
consequences for Greece and the wider region.
From left to right on the Greek political spectrum, the lack of
democratic consultation on the national level and the democratic deficit
within the EU as a whole (typified by the reaction to George
Papandreou's admittedly ill-conceived referendum plan) are causing
consternation. It is at least ironic that civil society has found itself
cast as an obstacle to EU modernisation. In a recent satirical poem by
Orpheas Apergis, Greece becomes Europe's "foster child", picked up by
romantic tourists on a whim; now, addicted to her "Rheingold", the
screwed-up-sophisticated child ponders what her gilded prison was really
worth. She waits, passively, while a nanny administers poison as a
curative.[11] But as the example of the ultimate "polis", ancient Athens, recalls, it
is but one small step from democracy to imperium. Despite the rhetoric
of democracy in Pericles' funeral oration (taught in Greek schools today
as the nearest thing to an official ideology), the Delian League's
treasury was transferred from the neutral island of Delos to the
Acropolis. The worry is real: might ancient history prove comparable to
the pooling of economic sovereignty in an undemocratic EU? What will
happen when Greek citizens come to view the EU as responsible for the
sale, exploitation and destruction of their natural and cultural
heritage?[12]
Sharing the onus
The aim here has not been to deny Greek responsibility for developments
in the country over the last decade. Stereotypes like that of the "lazy
Greek" are wrong (Greeks work an average of 42.1 hours a week, more than
anywhere else in the EU) and border on racism. Nevertheless, individual
and collective responsibility in varying degrees is there for all to
see. As the political scientist Takis Pappas argues, the Greek system
has been based on clientelism, with the state in the role of primary
patron, mediating, among others, between the citizen-client and the
foreign underwriter in the form of the EU.[13] A recent OECD Public Governance Review reveals the extent to which
Greece's crisis is the crisis of an incompetent and burdensome state
following excessively lax fiscal policies.[14] Even tax evasion is, in part, the result of the correct perception that the tax authorities operate as rent-seekers.[15] Elena Panariti thus has a point when she argues that laws, including
environmental laws governing land use, need to be simplified and made
more transparent, thus reducing the disparity between formal rules and
informal procedures. This is not, however, the same thing as creating a
property developers' paradise.
Nor should it be argued that EU aid to Greece has failed across the
board. A number of large-scale physical capital investment projects will
have a lasting effect on Greeks' quality of life: chief among them the
Athens metro and airport, and some of the more effective investments in
drinking water and sewage-treatment installations, such as that on the
island of Psitalia, which serves Athens. Similarly, a number of smaller
restoration projects have proved a real boon, contributing both to
Greece's and Europe's cultural identity and to Greece's tourism
industry. One example is the EU-funded archaeological excavation at
Messene, granted a medal by Europa Nostra, an organisation at the
forefront of the movement for the creation of a pan-European civil
society. A common characteristic of these success stories is much closer
monitoring by the Commission and civil society, either because of the
projects' large scale or because of activities of NGOs on the ground.
Worryingly, under pressure from member states, the EU has decided to
reduce the role of the Commission in the supervision of projects for
2007-2013 and subsequent periods.[16]
The EU has talked the talk, and, most significantly, insisted upon EU law (the acquis communautaire)
being incorporated into Greek policy. Nevertheless, though hard to
evaluate due to the difficulty of distinguishing between actual
transfers and other compounding factors, the record of EU aid to Greece
should not be considered positive. The extent of the aid has meant that
financial transfers have been seen as an end in themselves: as being the
main force for modernisation. By directing structural and cohesion
largely towards physical capital, the EU set Greece on a development
path dependent on exogenous support. Above all, EU aid has strengthened
the position of intermediaries and rent-seeking elements in the Greek
economy. Intermediaries and rent-seekers have been largely but not
exclusively Greek. The Siemens and Ferrostaal slush funds used to
bolster exports to the periphery have not been adequately brought to
justice.[17] Practices linked to the inter-European arms trade, a Danegeld for our times, remain largely invisible.[18 ]"Remember those helicopters, Monsieur l'Ambassadeur": successive
governments of Greece made sure they did remember. Even on occasions
when EU support has been properly directed, the result has been
to release Greek government spending for patronage and other political
purposes. There is therefore a positive correlation between EU aid and
the size of the Greek public sector.
Given the trap into which Greeks allowed themselves to fall after the
incorporation of their unreformed economy into the eurozone, and the
EU's role in dictating Greek policies and politics in the present, the
EU shares a large part of the onus for the creation of a viable
framework for Greece to emerge from the crisis. The EU must be firm when
it comes to the implementation of its aid programme, but the
programme's objectives should also be redefined. The role of civil
society, and of the European Commission in the planning, oversight and
implementation of projects, should be increased. EU policies should
focus not on investments in physical capital but on structural reform.
This means, above all, strengthening institutions: bolstering
administrative efficiency – especially with regard to juridical, tax and
planning authorities – and resource efficiency, including protecting
the environment. The widespread sale of land and the destruction of
Greece's environment will lead to a form of post-Sovietisation, as
attitudes towards state authority and the EU grow increasingly anarchic;
a growing gap between official rules and unofficial practices will be
the inevitable result.
A "Task Force for Greece" under the auspices of the Commission has been
established whose aim is to increase absorption rates, which now stand
at less an a third of the total for the 2007-2013 period. Given the
circumstances, the decision to reduce Greek co-funding of projects to a
token 5 per cent should be commended. Johannes Hahn, European
Commissioner for Regional Policy, has proposed that the Task Force
supply funds directly to viable enterprises suffering due to the
liquidity problems of the Greek market, a first for EU Structural and
Cohesion Funds. Still it should be noted that the Structural and
Cohesion Funds are being used to stimulate growth and preserve
employment in the short term, never their aim, but frequently their
practical impact. But if it is the myriad practices of the short term
that bear upon medium- and long-term development, then the EU should be
calling for a clean break with the consumption and construction fuelled
practices that led Greece to the current crisis, not administering
another, bigger dose of the same drug.
To be fair, the Commission has limited room to manoeuvre. With
expansionary policies on a pan-European level having been ruled out, EU
funds constitute the only available tool to foster growth in Greece. The
Task Force will emphasise the reform of the Greek state, and will
hopefully pay attention to local as well as central government, liaising
with elected local councils to create strategic plans for sustainable
growth in each region. Still, such policies are not sufficient. Without
determined action by the countries of the centre to prevent Europe-wide
recession and a collapse of the euro, the reform process in Greece and
elsewhere will be prematurely extinguished. Contrary to much recent
rhetoric,[19] Eurobonds, correctly designed, would enhance a pan-European reformist
agenda. In Greece there is an increasing danger that the requirements of
fiscal contraction will lead to a broken state, a broken environment
and a humiliated society. As a manifesto signed by prominent German
Green and Social Democrat politicians makes clear, austerity programmes
are not enough: "Germany now holds the key to the future of European
integration and the prosperity of 300 million people in the euro area.
It would be fatal if Europe were to founder on the narrow-mindedness of a
German government."[20] Angela Merkel has gone out of her way to stress that the current crisis
is not a sprint but a marathon, an unfortunate metaphor given that the
first Marathon ended with its runner, Phidippides, dead. However, if
Merkel is right, Greece should not sacrifice her long-term advantages,
her natural and cultural environment, in order to reduce the risk of
contagion to the centre. Preserving Europe's environmental and cultural
heritage is as important as rescuing her banking system. Moreover, the
EU-IMF policy mix that pushes construction as the main source of growth
is actually value destroying.[21] Properly understood, the set of rules governing debt and those
governing environmental protection are not incompatible: good debt
management, social protection and environmental and cultural
conservation are all elements in sustainable development. The
combination of these elements could, over the long-term, make Germany a
model for other European countries. It is the lack of all three elements
that is threatening Greece today.
Both Braziliero and Sotiris Goritsas' other classic, the road movie Balkanizater,
depict dystopias. Here on the periphery we have spent much of the past
century dreaming of Europe – utopian font of Enlightenment, order and
progress. Modernisation has long been coterminous with that ugly word,
"Europeanisation". And yet, as the title Braziliero suggests, we
are shaking to the tunes of Latin America, at least as that continent
was imagined a decade ago. Today, Latin America has emerged from its
debt crises. Brazil, post Lula, is booming. Asked recently about the
situation in Greece, Goritsas retorted: "This experience [...] provides
outstanding material for a film. [...] Tired of unrestrained consumerism
[...] I had hoped the crisis would help us recover lost values [...]
but what is happening is not what I expected. A state of violence is on
the increase, both in Greece and Europe".[22] Perhaps Goritsas' next film will be named after our own increasingly dark continent, "Europe".
This article was originally published by Eurozine.
Footnotes:
1. World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED), Our Common Future, Oxford University Press, 1987, 8; for definitions of sustainable development, see Robert W. Kates, Thomas M. Parris, and Anthony A. Leiserowitz, "What Is Sustainable Development? Goals, Indicators, Values, and Practice", Environment. Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, April 2005, http://www.environmentmagazine.org/Editorials/Kates-apr05-full.html
2. See: "Acheloos River Diversion Project, Greece", Watertechnology.net, http://www.water-technology.net/projects/acheloos/
3. Ioli Christopoulou, "Creating a Sustainable Europe: The Role of the European Union Structural Funds", Doctoral Dissertation, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, 2011, 362. For the abstract of the work, see http://fletcher.tufts.edu/CIERP/~/media/Fletcher/Microsites/CIERP/Publications/thesis%20abstracts/ICAbstract.pdf
4. International Monetary Fund, "Greece: Letter of Intent, Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies, and Technical Memorandum of Understanding", 4 July 2011, http://www.imf.org/external/np/loi/2011/grc/070411.pdf
5. International Monetary Fund, "Greece: Fifth Review Under the Stand-By Arrangement, Rephasing and Request for Waivers of Nonobservance of Performance Criteria; Press Release on the Executive Board Discussion; and Statement by the Executive Director for Greece", December 2011, http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2011/cr11351.pdf
6. Elena Panariti, "Institutional reform can lead Greece out of the crisis", The Huffington Post, 13 December 2011, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/elena-panaritis/greece-economic-reforms_b_1145990.html
7. Miranda Xafa, interview with Demetrios Diamantides, "Vriskomaste se hreokopia en anastole", Imerisia, 12 March 2011, http://www.imerisia.gr/article.asp?catid=13115&subid=2&pubid=102757157
8. Interview with the author, 18 December 2011.
9. See Ecoanemos, 19 August 2011, http://ecoanemos.wordpress.com/2011/08/19/%CE%B5%CE%BD%CE%B7%CE%BC%CE%B5%CF%81%CF%89%CF%84%CE%B9%CE%BA%CE%BF-%CE%B4%CE%B5%CE%BB%CF%84%CE%B9%CE%BF-9-28-%CE%B9%CE%BF%CF%85%CE%BB%CE%AF%CE%BF%CF%85-19-%CE%B1%CF%85%CE%B3%CE%BF%CF%8D%CF%83/; also http://www.egaio.gr/
10. Theodoros Skylakakis, questions to the European Commission, 14 November 2011, from his web-site, http://www.skylakakis.gr/index.php/2010-11-16-02-09-33/70-2011-02-01-21-53-56/components/plugins/plugins/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=53&Itemid=105&limitstart=20
11. Orpheas Apergis, Y, Pataki Press: Athens 2011, 92-95.
12. See Iannis Carras, "A farewell to the Aegean: The EU, the IMF and the destruction of an ancient sea", Open Democracy, 30 June 2011, http://www.opendemocracy.net/iannis-carras/farewell-to-aegean-eu-imf-and-destruction-of-ancient-sea
13. Takis Pappas, "The causes of the Greek crisis are in Greek politics", Open Democracy, 29 November 2011, http://www.opendemocracy.net/openeconomy/takis-s-pappas/causes-of-greek-crisis-are-in-greek-politics; see also Georges Prévélakis, "Greece: This history behind the collapse", in Eurozine 23 December 2011, http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2011-12-23-prevelakis-en.html
14. See OECD, "Greece: Review of the Central Administration", December 2011, http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/governance/greece-review-of-the-central-administration_9789264102880-en
15. Kerin Hope, "Greek Tax collectors accused over bribes", FT, 14 December 2011, http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/b74b3302-2678-11e1-9ed3-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1gf37l9BK
16. See Christopoulou,Sustainable Europe, 383.
17. See "Siemens will sich mit Griechenland vergleichen", Der Spiegel, 6 May 2011, http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/vorab/0,1518,761043,00.html; see also "Germans admit bribes for subs", ekathimerini, 3 May 2011, http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_wsite1_1398_03/05/2011_389457
18. See: defense-aerospace.com, http://www.defense-aerospace.com/article-view/feature/117242/germany-probes-greek-arms-deals.html
19. Severin Weiland, "Euro-Bonds-Debatte. Merkel vermeidet das hässliche B-Wort", Der Spiegel, 22 November 2011, http://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschland/0,1518,799315,00.html
20. See http://www.gruene-bundestag.de/cms/english/dok/399/399059.the_euro_area_must_not_founder_on_the_na.html
21. As Spanish property developers and banks have discovered. See: Sharon Smyth, "'Unsellable' Real Estate Assets Threaten Survival of Smaller Spanish Banks", Bloomberg, 18 November 2011, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-11-17/spain-s-unsellable-real-estate-assets-threaten-smaller-banks.html; in an important precedent for Greece, the European Parliament has condemned Spain for not fulfilling its obligations to protect its coast-line. See http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/file.jsp?id=5683012.
22. See "'Dystychos e krise den ehei ferei stous Ellenes ten autognosia' leei o skenothetes Soteres Gkoritsas sto APE-MPE", omogeneia, 7 November 2011, http://omogeneia.ana-mpa.gr/press.php?id=15794
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