Poverty And Social Exclusion Rising In Greece
By Leonidas Oikonomakis
Source: Roarmag.org
Sunday, December 16, 2012
So, for you to get it straight, I repeat: the disabled will contribute to the salvation of the Greek economy 82 million euros that they absolutely need for their decent and dignified survival, while the ship-owners, who constitute 0.7% of the Greek population while controlling 60% of the nations total wealth, will contribute a grand total of 80 million. This gives you a clear idea of who is paying the price of austerity measures imposed by the Troika and executed by the Greek government.
In Greece, we know well who is paying for the crisis. A good question to ask would be: who gains? Apart from Greeces private creditors, could it be the multinational corporations, which are now swooping in to benefit from the countrys dramatically reduced labor rights and privatization schemes? Again, I will give you an example that I recently read in the press. Kostis Hatzidakis, the Minister of Development, announced proudly that Unilever, an Anglo-Dutch multinational consumer goods company, will from now on produce 110 of its products that it used to produce abroad, in Greece. He also mentioned that this will boost employment and that his government wants to create a business-friendly environment in Greece in order to attract investments for development.
What Hatzidakis did not mention are the conditions under which the future employees of Unilever and whatever other multinational decides to invest in Greece bringing its production facilities or, maybe, buying its state owned enterprises will have to work. Let me present them to you: Unilevers Greek employees will be paid slave salaries (586 euros is the minimum wage today, down from 751 euros before the crisis, while for young workers under the age of 25 it stands at 510 euros: below the poverty threshold!). They will only have minimum labor rights. They will have to work 6 and maybe 7 days a week. They will only have a minimum of 11 hours rest before getting back to work (from 13 that it was so far). And they will be extremely easy to fire without compensation as the government effectively rid itself of pesky labor rights.
All the above is a direct result of the austerity measures and structural reforms the Greek government has taken so far to create a business-friendly environment and bring in investments and development, as they like to say. And the question remains: for whom?
http://www.zcommunications.org/poverty-and-social-exclusion-rising-in-greece-by-leonidas-oikonomakis