Greece shows what can happen when the young revolt against corrupt elites [View all]
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jan/25/greece-shows-what-can-happen-when-young-revolt-against-corrupt-elites?CMP=share_btn_tw
Lots of great stories on the Syriza victory, but I thought this one had an interesting angle.
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As for the Greek oligarchs, their misrule long predates the crisis. These are not only the famous shipping magnates, whose industry pays no tax, but the bosses of energy and construction groups and football clubs. As one eminent Greek economist told me last week: These guys have avoided paying tax through the Metaxas dictatorship, the Nazi occupation, a civil war and a military junta. They had no intention of paying taxes as the troika began demanding Greece balance the books after 2010, which is why the burden fell on those Greeks trapped in the PAYE system a workforce of 3.5 million that fell during the crisis to just 2.5 million.
The oligarchs allowed the Greek state to become a battleground of conflicting interests. As Yiannis Palaiologos, a Greek journalist, put it in his recent book on the crisis, there is a pervasive irresponsibility, a sense that no one is in charge, no one is willing or able to act as a custodian of the common good.
But their most corrosive impact is on the layers of society beneath them. There goes X, Greeks say to each other as the rich walk to their tables in trendy bars. He is controlling Y in parliament and having an affair with Z. Its like a soap opera, but for real, and too many Greeks are deferentially mesmerised by it.
Over three general elections Syrizas achievement has been to politicise the issue of the oligarchy. The Greek word for them is the entangled and they were, above all, entangled in the centrist political duopoly. Because Syriza owes them nothing, its leader, Alexis Tsipras, was able to give the issue of corruption and tax evasion both rhetorical barrels and this resonated massively among the young.
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