43913Fermer43915
Yoshi NoirLe 29/06/2015 à 17:42
flanker (./43911) :
Par contre, je ne vois absolument pas le côté démocratique de l'Eurogroupe, qui force un gouvernement à démissionner sous prétexte qu'il veut consulter son peuple (comme pour le précédent gouvernement grec), et qui rompt les négociations, à nouveau parce que le peuple est consulté ?

Ben en fait, c'est carrément un coup d'État feutré qu'a voulu faire l'Eurogroupe :/
I would vote no, for two reasons. First, much as the prospect of euro exit frightens everyone — me included — the troika is now effectively demanding that the policy regime of the past five years be continued indefinitely. Where is the hope in that? Maybe, just maybe, the willingness to leave will inspire a rethink, although probably not. But even so, devaluation couldn’t create that much more chaos than already exists, and would pave the way for eventual recovery, just as it has in many other times and places. Greece is not that different.

Second, the political implications of a yes vote would be deeply troubling. The troika clearly did a reverse Corleone — they made Tsipras an offer he can’t accept, and presumably did this knowingly. So the ultimatum was, in effect, a move to replace the Greek government. And even if you don’t like Syriza, that has to be disturbing for anyone who believes in European ideals.



http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/06/28/grisis/?module=BlogPost-Title&version=Blog%20Main&contentCollection=Opinion&action=Click&pgtype=Blogs&region=Body