When the Greek Political System Clashed with Europe: Why the Greek Sovereign-Debt Crisis is Taking so Long to End

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Deciphering the Greek Crisis: Issues, Failures, Challenges - Guest Editors: Kostas Ifantis and Dimitrios Triantaphyllou

Abstract

The central argument of this essay is that, in order to understand the reasons behind the Greek economy’s inability to recover sooner from its 8-year recession, analysis must focus on the institutional, political and cultural traits of the country rather than take a primarily “economistic” approach and simply blame “excessive austerity” and/or the euro. In fact, it will be argued that Greece’s positive performance under the euro (until government actions derailed the economy) is generally underappreciated, suggesting that if the country’s institutional weaknesses are addressed, the economy will grow. If they are not, the country’s long-term economic potential will almost certainly remain unfulfilled.

Keywords

Greek Economic Crisis, Austerity, Structural Reforms.

Citation

Papadopoulos, Constantine A., “When the Greek Political System Clashed with Europe: Why the Greek Sovereign-Debt Crisis is Taking so Long to End?”, Uluslararasi İliskiler, Vol. 15, No. 58, 2018, pp. 21-34, DOI: 10.33458/uidergisi.518194

Affiliations

  • Constantine A. Papadopoulos, Adjunct Professor, D.Phil., School of Business, Deree – The American College of Greece
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