Putting Politics Above Markets: Historical Background to the Greek Debt Crisis

19 Pages Posted: 11 Mar 2013

Date Written: August 15, 2011

Abstract

Political clientelism and rent seeking have been the central organizing principles of Greek society since the foundation of the Greek state in the 19th century. The influence of the Eastern Orthodox Church on Greek nationalism and the legacy of the patrimonialist Ottoman empire produced a weak civil society. The result has been a disproportionately large Greek state and public bureaucracy since the 1800s that set the stage for rent-seeking struggles that have followed. Since the 1930s, political patronage has been disbursed through increases in public sector employment, regulations that limit competition, and the imposition of levies on transactions that benefit third parties. The resulting system has encouraged corruption, discouraged wealth creation and affected popular ideological narratives. The view that the state is good and that markets are bad is widespread, held across the political spectrum, and is understandable in a rent-seeking society where all activities, including market transactions, are seen as redistribution. But the realization of “putting people above markets” has deepened clientelism and produced the current national crisis.

Keywords: Greek debt crisis, economy in Greece, rent seeking, clientelism, political patronage, corruption in Greece, Greece political system, federal government

JEL Classification: D73, H11, H12

Suggested Citation

Michas, Takis, Putting Politics Above Markets: Historical Background to the Greek Debt Crisis (August 15, 2011). Cato Institute Working Paper, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2231654 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2231654

Takis Michas (Contact Author)

Eleftherotypia ( email )

Minoos 10-16
11743 Neos
Athens
Greece

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
111
Abstract Views
507
Rank
444,918
PlumX Metrics