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	Comments on: Greece’s economic strategy and Eurozone crisis: TAVA	</title>
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	<link>https://greececonference2014.weaconferences.net/papers/greeces-economic-strategy-and-eurozone-crisis-tava/</link>
	<description>20th October to 21st December 2014</description>
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		By: Yannis Dafermos		</title>
		<link>https://greececonference2014.weaconferences.net/papers/greeces-economic-strategy-and-eurozone-crisis-tava/#comment-4</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Yannis Dafermos]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Dec 2014 07:25:52 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[This is a very interesting paper that discusses many important aspects of the Greek crisis and describes various alternative policies that could be used to deal with the crisis. 

In my view, of particular importance is the idea of industrial policy and the role of finance in promoting such a policy. One of the reasons that GDP has fallen so rapidly in Greece over the last years is that the Troika and the Greek governments had assumed that the reduction of wages would increase exports and investment significantly. However, exports and investment have been highly inelastic with respect to wages and, as a result, the adverse effects of wage reductions on consumption (and thus on domestic demand) have prevailed. This experience has very clearly illustrated the need for a radically different approach that will focus on the role of industrial policy in attaining a sustainable rise in investment and exports. Your analysis describes some crucial issues in the implementation of such an approach. I think that these issues should be the subject of detailed research in the future.   

I have two general questions:
(1) The problem with the Greek public sector before the crisis was not that it was a large sector (as it is often argued), but that in many cases it was functioning ineffectively. Ineffectiveness refers, for example, to the fact that the reduction of the poverty rate achieved per euro of social protection expenditures was relatively low or that the quality of various public sector services (relative to the resources) was not high enough. Do you think that the improvement of public sector’s effectiveness is an important issue? And, if yes, which are some policies that could be implemented to make the public sector more effective?   
(2) I think that some of the policies that you suggest in section 5 (such as the capital flow regulation or an ECB-coordinated ‘bad bank’) could not be easily implemented within the current institutional and political structure of the Eurozone. As you point out in footnote 24, it is possible that such policies will not be permissible within the framework of European law. In such a case, what do you think would be the best strategy for Greece in order to promote these policies?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a very interesting paper that discusses many important aspects of the Greek crisis and describes various alternative policies that could be used to deal with the crisis. </p>
<p>In my view, of particular importance is the idea of industrial policy and the role of finance in promoting such a policy. One of the reasons that GDP has fallen so rapidly in Greece over the last years is that the Troika and the Greek governments had assumed that the reduction of wages would increase exports and investment significantly. However, exports and investment have been highly inelastic with respect to wages and, as a result, the adverse effects of wage reductions on consumption (and thus on domestic demand) have prevailed. This experience has very clearly illustrated the need for a radically different approach that will focus on the role of industrial policy in attaining a sustainable rise in investment and exports. Your analysis describes some crucial issues in the implementation of such an approach. I think that these issues should be the subject of detailed research in the future.   </p>
<p>I have two general questions:<br />
(1) The problem with the Greek public sector before the crisis was not that it was a large sector (as it is often argued), but that in many cases it was functioning ineffectively. Ineffectiveness refers, for example, to the fact that the reduction of the poverty rate achieved per euro of social protection expenditures was relatively low or that the quality of various public sector services (relative to the resources) was not high enough. Do you think that the improvement of public sector’s effectiveness is an important issue? And, if yes, which are some policies that could be implemented to make the public sector more effective?<br />
(2) I think that some of the policies that you suggest in section 5 (such as the capital flow regulation or an ECB-coordinated ‘bad bank’) could not be easily implemented within the current institutional and political structure of the Eurozone. As you point out in footnote 24, it is possible that such policies will not be permissible within the framework of European law. In such a case, what do you think would be the best strategy for Greece in order to promote these policies?</p>
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