http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/usury?s=tusury
[yoo-zhuh-ree]
noun, plural usuries.
1.
the lending or practice of lending money at an exorbitant interest.
2.
an exorbitant amount or rate of interest, especially in excess of the legal rate.
3.
Obsolete. interest paid for the use of money.
The whole issue on Greece versus extreme Capitalist usury sinks its roots into the whole ethical dilemma of usury, not of interest charging, but of excessive lending with exploitative charging.
If this isn't changed, we will have defaults all over the place all the time. Just as borrowers ending up jobless requires readjustments, countries being hard-hit by recession and extraordinarily high unemployment, require adjustments for the same reason.
Ok, since you don't understand compassion nor empathy, let's see it from a point of view you will understand -sheer greed:
Not renegotiating a loan when the borrower is unemployed and broke, means you soon will not see a penny. Killing the hen who lays the golden eggs.
This strange world is called reality.
P.S. This is not a mortgage. The Fourth Reich will not get a house back by saying no to Greece. It's more like killing the Euro and blaming it on Syriza (who BTW just got here 10 months ago to pick up the previous Greek governments and IMF's mess). Oh, and guess who's getting a nice fat paycheck either way?
The problem is this goose lays rotten eggs. They are still unwilling to listen to reason about how they manage their social spending, until they get screwed by their misconduct there's no hope they'll reform.
The problem is this goose lays rotten eggs. They are still unwilling to listen to reason about how they manage their social spending, until they get screwed by their misconduct there's no hope they'll reform.
They have listened to "reason" for the last five years. The result is a recession worse than the Great Depression was in the US.
The Europeans were asking them for a 4.5 or 5% GDP surplus. No European country has done that except Finland briefly during the Nokia boom and perhaps Norway which has plenty of oil. the demands were unreasonable.They have listened to "reason" for the last five years. The result is a recession worse than the Great Depression was in the US.
They haven't been listening. They've just been trying to get more money rather than fix their budget problems.
Charity for German corporations who have benefited by keeping the Euro together. They would not get so much "charity" if they had a strong deutsche markLending them money has been more akin to charity than anything that even slightly resembles usury.
That's primary surplus, i.e. surplus without debt repayments (though this term seems to have been invented only for the situation in Greece). This depends more about percentage of government revenue per GDP, amount of debt and the credit rating of the country than its affluence. Norway with all its oil wealth for example has about 0.4% primary surplus if calculated this way. Germany ~1.4%, and France would be around 4%.The Europeans were asking them for a 4.5 or 5% GDP surplus. No European country has done that except Finland briefly during the Nokia boom and perhaps Norway which has plenty of oil. the demands were unreasonable.They haven't been listening. They've just been trying to get more money rather than fix their budget problems.
Unreasonable according to whom? Both sides think they are reasonable and have good reasons to think so.
This Margaret Thatcher quote is very apt in this situation:
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money"
I do hate Thatcher with a passion. But she did say lots of great quotable things.
Unreasonable economic policy.
You can't destimulate an economy into growth.
The demands made on Greece were religious in nature, not sound economic policy.
Sound economic policy is to institute massive Keynesian spending to stimulate an economy first then when it is robust increase the demands to pay debts at a larger scale.
Super-silly notion. Of course it´s not about humiliating anybody. It´s just a fact that Greece won´t be able to pay back without austerity.<snip>
It may or may not be able to pay back eventually without the kind of austerity the troika is demanding.
It will definitely not be able to pay back ever if it cripples its economic infrastructure by complying with their demands. We've seen where that leads over the last 5 years.
So either the troika is literally insane - trying the same thing again and again and expecting different results - or their real goal has nothing to do with getting the money back. My money's on the latter, but if that sounds too much like a conspiracy theory to you, you can bet on the former. In terms of practical implications, it doesn't matter much - they need to be stopped one way or the other.
It may or may not be able to pay back eventually without the kind of austerity the troika is demanding.
It will definitely not be able to pay back ever if it cripples its economic infrastructure by complying with their demands. We've seen where that leads over the last 5 years.
So either the troika is literally insane - trying the same thing again and again and expecting different results - or their real goal has nothing to do with getting the money back. My money's on the latter, but if that sounds too much like a conspiracy theory to you, you can bet on the former. In terms of practical implications, it doesn't matter much - they need to be stopped one way or the other.
I agree. It´s stopped being about the wisest economic policy. Now it´s about Greece showing some political will to take their situation seriously. They still aren´t. It´s only now starting to sink in that the EU has stopped being soft on them. I think Greece, as a nation, needs this. They need to be shaken out of their super-cynical mindset of that nothing ever matters, and it´s just about grabbing as much as possible for yourself, damn the consequences "because everybody else is doing it as well". That´s how they got into this situation to begin with. Greeks need to feel that what they do matters. Right now, they don´t.
They have listened to "reason" for the last five years. The result is a recession worse than the Great Depression was in the US.
They haven't been listening. They've just been trying to get more money rather than fix their budget problems.

If only we knew the definitions of "budget" and "deficit" greeks used at that time.They haven't been listening. They've just been trying to get more money rather than fix their budget problems.
Simply wrong. Greece's primary budget balance has gone from -10% of GDP in 2009 to +5% in 2013.
They haven't been listening. They've just been trying to get more money rather than fix their budget problems.
Simply wrong. Greece's primary budget balance has gone from -10% of GDP in 2009 to +5% in 2013. But something funny and totally unexpected (not) happened: The massive austerity caused a double dip-recession, and the shrinking tax base combined with exploding welfare costs annihilated those gains - not excessive spending.
If only we knew the definitions of "budget" and "deficit" greeks used at that time.Simply wrong. Greece's primary budget balance has gone from -10% of GDP in 2009 to +5% in 2013.
It's greek data firstIf only we knew the definitions of "budget" and "deficit" greeks used at that time.
Those are OECD data.
I agree. It´s stopped being about the wisest economic policy. Now it´s about Greece showing some political will to take their situation seriously. They still aren´t. It´s only now starting to sink in that the EU has stopped being soft on them. I think Greece, as a nation, needs this. They need to be shaken out of their super-cynical mindset of that nothing ever matters, and it´s just about grabbing as much as possible for yourself, damn the consequences "because everybody else is doing it as well". That´s how they got into this situation to begin with. Greeks need to feel that what they do matters. Right now, they don´t.
This literally doesn't make any sense. You want the Greeks to suffer to teach them a lesson while admitting that their suffering is only going to make things worse for everyone else too. That's primitive eye-for-an-eye thinking which has never brought us forward.
So any of you willing to put your money where your mouth is and support Greece directly?
IndieGoGo Greek Bailout Fund
They already raised 1.5 million Euro. That's 1/1000 of the payment Greece just missed a couple of days ago, so you better get serious with contributing! You can even get some Greek goodies for your trouble.
So any of you willing to put your money where your mouth is and support Greece directly?
IndieGoGo Greek Bailout Fund
They already raised 1.5 million Euro. That's 1/1000 of the payment Greece just missed a couple of days ago, so you better get serious with contributing! You can even get some Greek goodies for your trouble.
Or you can invest your money with my Brooklyn Bridge Management Co. Inc and shortly will make enough profit to double or triple your donation to the above Charity for Greece and its. sympathisers. my verified Email is
BBMCO.suckers.wanted.@assoonasposs.com