There Are Two Kinds Of Austerity. Which Will Greeks Choose?
Published in The Tennessean and Forbes , Sunday, February 26, 2012 by Richard J. Grant The radio announcer asked, “But will the Greek people tolerate another year of recession?” Left unasked was the question, “If they won't, so what? What are they going to do about it?” Some of their compatriots have responded with riots and arson to any suggestion of government austerity. Such unproductive catharsis and destruction of property seems, however, to compound the austerity rather than mitigate it. Worse, it illustrates just how widespread is the confusion between government austerity and private austerity. Historically, those nations that have run relatively austere and less-interventionist governments have been those in which citizens have most prospered. It is in other countries where government has spent excessively and intervened heavily in the economy that citizens have felt true austerity. In Greece, as in America, we see in their results the shortcomi...