Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Re: Die Hard — The Welfare State
Re: Die Hard — The Welfare State
Jun 28, 2026 3:24 PM

News reports today on the Greek debt crisis are packed with scary terms like “implosion” and “financial doomsday” and “ebola” and “contagion.” The anxiety has ratcheted up considerably this week, and not just for EU heads of state but also for President Obama. He should be worried. As I pointed out in a previous post, “Die Hard — The Welfare State,” the United States awaits its own day of reckoning for the sins of mounting government debt, a bloated public sector and a lack of political will — by both Democrats and Republicans — e to grips with the problem. The day of reckoning e. The only question is when. A roundup:

Alexis Papachelas in the Greek daily Kathimerini:

The financial figures are devastating and, even by the most optimistic forecasts, repaying our debt will be extremely hard. The EU and the IMF are willing to lend us money for 2010, but hesitate to make mitment for the years e – first because they also have domestic issues and, second, because they fear they may need an additional 450 billion euros for Spain or Portugal. Moreover, Greek politicians have made a very bad impression on them, so they think that even if Greece were to sign an EU-IMF deal, the risks are high. They see no social and political consensus down the road, nor any sign of professionalism or political will among the political elite.

Chris Bremner in the Times (UK):

As Greece teetered on the edge of the financial abyss, a cry went up today near Syntagma Square, near the Parliament in central Athens: “Unfreeze our jobs!”. The call ing not from disgruntled workers, but about 100 angry young middle-class men and women who had missed out on the chance of ing tax inspectors.

The protesters shouting outside the Finance Ministry had passed the tough exams and signed contracts, but the gold-plated jobs had fallen victim to Greece’s austerity cuts. “They have frozen our lives. We are people with qualifications and many gave up jobs for this. We are going to hell and they are plained Joseph Athanassiadis, 40, one of the disappointed recruits .

Tax inspectors are what Greece needs, said Mr Athanassiadis, a father of two and an engineer by profession. He had a point, given that tax evasion is an Olympic sport in Greece and a source of its woes. Across the sunny street, however, a passer-by bellowed at the demonstrators: “State spongers. Earn your living!”

Harry Wallop in the Telegraph (UK) :

Ben May, Greek economist at think tank Capital Economics, said: “Their mistake was to go out, borrow money and use it to fund huge wage growth, rather than pay down its already substantial debts.”

Greece went on a spending spree, allowing public sector workers’ wages to nearly double over the last decade, while it continued to fund one of the most generous pension systems in the world. Workers when e to retire usually receive a pension equating to 92 per cent of their pre-retirement salary. As Greece has one of the fastest ageing populations in Europe, the bill to fund these pensions kept on mounting.

An editorial in the Financial Times:

The countries sharing mon currency must now make up their mind. If they mean what they have been saying since February – and think Greece is indeed doing what is needed to bring its debt under control – then they must line up the funds required to carry Greece through its refinancing needs for a protracted period. This means something like the €120bn figure reportedly floated by Dominique Strauss-Kahn, IMF managing director. Nothing less will reassure private investors.

If instead they judge that Greece is not merely illiquid but insolvent and will never be able to repay its debts in full, nothing is gained by postponing the inevitable default. The eurozone and the IMF must then help Greece manage the restructuring process, including by financing reasonable primary deficits – lest default turn into depression – until it regains access to debt markets (this alone would eat up the €45bn they have pledged).

In the Wall Street Journal, Gerald Seib has some advice for U.S. policymakers:

— The tax system has to be changed. The U.S. doesn’t have a system that can fund the government the country wants. The Tax Foundation says the levies paid by the top 1% of taxpayers now exceed those paid by all of those in the bottom 95%. And the Tax Policy Institute says almost half of all filers will pay no 2009 e taxes at all, because of various exclusions and credits—up, by some estimates, from a quarter in 1990.

This may be great for those who like soak-the-rich rhetoric, but it’s no way to finance a country. More than that, it’s a bit of a hoax on middle- and lower-middle-class Americans. They certainly pay payroll taxes, and the more they are excused from the e tax-system, the more likely it is that they will be hit with sneakier and less-progressive taxes. Tax reform—a flatter tax system, a value-added tax, something—is needed.

— Americans have to change how they think about retirement. When the economy recovers and costs for recession-related bailouts, stimulus spending and unemployment benefits are resolved, we’ll still be left unable to really afford our Social Security, Medicare and mitments. When the easier stuff is done, this is the hard reality, requiring a new and nonpoliticized national discussion.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Bastion Magazine: Edmund Burke tempers libertarian individualism
I just was introduced to Bastion Magazine , founded by a group of young libertarians who have realized that in order to have a limited state, we also need strong civil and cultural institutions and especially strong families. I have only skimmed the site, but it looks well done. As one of the founders, C. Jay Engel, the founder and publisher explained to me, they began to realize that insights from thinkers like Edmund Burke and Robert Nisbet about civil...
Benjamin Franklin’s advice on the Chicago schools strike
Their last remaining dispute in the Chicago schools strike could be resolved if both sides understood a basic economic concept taught by one of the nation’s Founding Fathers. Although the Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Teachers Union announced a tentative agreement Wednesday evening, the Second City’s 300,000-plus students still began their eleventh day outside the classroom Thursday, because the CTU added a new demand Wednesday night. They want the city to pay union members for every day they went...
Lord Acton on true liberalism
Early last month there was a great debate over the question “What is Liberalism?” on the Free Thoughts Podcast. The debate was between Helena Rosenblatt, professor of history at City University of New York and Daniel Klein, professor of economics at George Mason University. Klein’s work has been mentioned on the PowerBlog before and I referenced his insightful scholarship in my talk, “Lord Acton, Liberty, Conscience, and the Social Order” at this year’s Acton University. Rosenblatt’s recent book, The Lost...
Bernie Sanders: ‘Thank God’ for capitalism
Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) rarely expresses thanks to the divine, much less for the system of global capitalism. When the democratic bines both sentiments, as he did this weekend, it is worth reporting. Sanders’ statement takes on greater significance given the context of his interviewer’s question: Bernie Sanders credited capitalism with lifting 1.2 billion people out of extreme poverty. The moment came during an interview with John Harwood of CNBC. After Harwood asked the Democratic presidential hopeful a series of...
Should social media companies be treated like publishers and broadcasters?
We can count on seeing certain stories in the news as part of a pool of general interest that changes over time. Consider the endless stories questioning the value of college education, pronouncing the harms of artificial sweeteners, describing storms in the Atlantic, or detailing various crises at the border. Increasingly, that same body of news includes depictions of social media as an unregulated wild west. Many of these stories have to do with the ways social panies use our...
Hope and the human person
Last week, Rule of Faith, a new Orthodox Christian online journal, published my article, “V. S. Soloviev and the Russian Roots of Personalism.” The article examines the nineteenth-century Russian Orthodox philosopher Vladimir Soloviev’s philosophy as it relates to the twentieth-century social philosophy known as personalism. While the tradition includes much variety — spanning figures such as Martin Buber, Nicholas Berdyaev, Jacques Maritain, and Pope John Paul II — several mon to these figures can be found in Soloviev’s thought as...
The Acton Institutes spreads the good news of environmental hope in France
The Acton Institute continues our outreach to the 275 million people who speak French as a first language with a new translation of an article on a vital topic. In this case, we share the news of a UN official who countered the all-pervasive pessimism over climate change, telling young people: Live your lives without fear. Peter Taalas, the UN’s chief climate official, offers a less catastrophic alternative to the doomsday scenarios of Extinction Rebellion or young Swedish activist Greta...
The UK election is about far more than Brexit: Rev. Richard Turnbull
As observers in the United States digest the results of the November 2019 election, UK voters begin their own election season. Prime Minister Boris Johnson left Buckingham Palace on Wednesday morning, saying that Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II has agreed to a general election on December 12. Ending the UK’s interminable Brexit negotiations will “release a pent up flood of investment,” Johnson said outside 10 Downing Street. “Uncertainty is deterring people from hiring new staff, from buying new homes, from...
Acton Line podcast: Liberation theology drives the Amazon synod; Remembering the Berlin Wall
On this episode, Acton’s Samuel Gregg joins the podcast to break down liberation theology, a Marxist movement that began in the 20th century and took root in the Catholic Church in Latin America. October 27 marked the close of the Synod of Bishops on the Amazon, a summit organized to foster conversation on ministry and ecological concerns in the Amazon region. But the synod also revealed how, as Gregg says, “liberation theology never really went away.” On the second segment,...
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: State-owned enterprises and trade
Alejandro Chafuen, Acton’s Managing Director, International, published a piece in Forbes yesterday on the place of state-owned enterprises in international trade. The question also extends to industries that, even if not owned by the state, are significantly influenced by government interests, regulation, and so on. Oil is a prime example of this, but there are many other instances, more recently including the data and tech industry. I have witnessed many harsh debates during off-the-record meetings between policy leaders and advocates...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved