Monday 3 October 2011

IMF: how can we enslave your country if your minions refuse to work?

The Greek government is perhaps pretty dizzy from the stress,
but they are cutting staff at the Economics Ministry, as the
same time as they want the rest of the staff to put the
screws to the rest of the country.

Finally, the Greeks have snookered their own government. The
wildcat strikes mean the IMF won't get its data and
then won't decide on its next penalty for Greece.

The (empty) threat is that Greece won't receive its next meal
ticket, in the form of 8 billion Euros.

Nice try at blackmail. There isn't a single Greeks who doesn't
understand the game.

Greece goes bankrupt, all the banks go boom.
So, dear IMF, don't give Greece the money. Stop "helping" the Greeks.

this was brought to you by The Next Stage of the Orlovian Theory.

Not Orwell, Orlov. the Stages of Social Decay
Greeks have lost faith in their government.
coming soon


checkitout: from London's F(^&*ckedup) Times
Strikes hamper Greek rescue effort
by Kerin Hope, Michael Mackenzie and Robin Wigglesworth – FT
Wildcat strikes in Greece have prevented the country’s bureaucrats from finalising next year’s vital budget figures, potentially holding up this month’s release of sorely needed fiscal aid and capping an ignominious quarter for global markets.
Despite a tentative improvement in sentiment over the past week, mounting fears over a potential Greek default and the tepid pace of the global economic recovery led to one of the worst three months on record for financial markets.
The S&P 500 was on Friday set for a drop of 5.7 per cent in September and a decline of 12.9 per cent over the third quarter, its worst performance since the final three months of 2008.
The FTSE All World index was also set for its worst decline since the three months following Lehman Brothers’ collapse in September 2008. It entered official bear market territory in September, shedding more than a fifth from its high in May. The FTSE 100 fell 13.7 per cent in the third quarter in its worst three-month performance since 2002.
Striking civil servants have blocked access to Greece’s statistical agency building in Athens since Tuesday, undermining efforts by Elstat, the statistics agency, to bring Greek figures in line with EU standards after years of fudging .
The so-called troika – the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF – are in Athens to inspect the budget figures before deciding whether to release the next €8bn ($10.9bn) tranche of its current bail-out loan."We will miss [Friday’s] deadline for sending final debt and deficit figures for 2010 to Eurostat, the Commission and the troika, because I and my team can’t get into the building," Andreas Georgiou, chairman of the Elstat statistics agency, told the Financial Times. "These detailed figures are urgently needed for the troika to recalibrate the draft budget, if required, before it goes to parliament on Monday."
Mr Georgiou, a former IMF official, was hired by the government last year with a brief to set up an independent statistical agency. He said members of the agency’s board have tried to undermine EU-mandated work practices. One former board member faces a criminal investigation for allegedly hacking into Mr Georgiou’s work computer.
Striking civil servants blockaded government ministries on Friday, including the headquarters of the finance, transport and health ministries, in order to prevent troika officials from collecting data needed for the current review.