Heylel
Trakanon Raider
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Well, the vast majority of those loans were just servicing the interest on other loans. The entire country is trapped in a large-scale equivalent of payday loan / title pawn traps. They can't afford their debt, so they take on more debt just to keep the old debt current while the water keeps rising.It would be better to frame the vote as a choice between a bad and a worse thing. Whichever way they voted, the Greek people are screwed; at least this way they get the slim satisfaction of giving the Eurozone the finger.
No-one really knows how this is going to play out now. It's a collision between economics and politics.
Economics would say the creditor countries have to write off a substantial amount of what the Greeks owe them but Eurozone politics don't allow them to do that (the IMF has a more realistic view as revealed by leaked reports over the weekend). Having spent months detailing how feckless the Greeks have been with the money lent to them the Europeans would now have to explain to their voters that a large part of that money will never be repaid. The risk to the Eurozone politicians is that their own voters might finally begin to ask exactly why so much of their money was given to a country even after it became clear that country was an economic basket case, and who made those decisions.
Only in this case, there's no car to repossess.