Fruits of victory will turn sour; creditors and debtors alike will be punished
NEVER in the field of economic conflict has so much been owed to so many by so few. The warring over Greece's future has been a debtor versus creditor battle. So far the Greeks seem to be winning. In achieving a decisive 61 per cent-39 per cent "No" vote in Sunday's referendum, Alexis Tsipras, the Greek Prime Minister, has implemented the credo attributed to his forebear Philip of Macedon, father of Alexander the Great: divide et impera.
The failure of the creditor countries, led by Germany and the Netherlands, to recognise a central maxim of guerrilla fighting - the enemy will always surprise - provides a key reason for the Oxi win. If you're outnumbered, practise the unorthodox. Tearing up…
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Columns
China’s better economic growth hides reasons to worry
In AI-copyright battle, an existential crisis emerges
Europe shows diversifying from China’s economy is hard to do
Strengthening interaction: Singapore’s role in EU-Asean ties
It’s time to lift the veil on incompetence
From field to fork: Net zero starts in our food chain