Krugman: If Europe’s leaders don't remember the right history, the European project of peace and
democracy through prosperity will not survive.
Weimar on the Aegean
The history of Germany after World War I is almost always cited in a curiously selective way. We hear endlessly about the hyperinflation of 1923, when people carted around wheelbarrows full of cash, but we never hear about the much more relevant deflation of the early 1930s, as the government of Chancellor Brüning having learned the wrong lessons tried to defend Germanys peg to gold with tight money and harsh austerity.
And what about what happened before the hyperinflation, when the victorious Allies tried to force Germany to pay huge reparations? Thats also a tale with a lot of modern relevance, because it has a direct bearing on the crisis now brewing over Greece. ... About those reparations: The basic story here is that Britain and France, instead of viewing the newly established German democracy as a potential partner, treated it as a conquered enemy, demanding that it make up their own wartime losses. This was deeply unwise and the demands placed on Germany were impossible to meet.
You can argue that Greece brought its problems on itself, although it had a lot of help from irresponsible lenders. At this point, however, the simple fact is that Greece cannot pay its debts in full. Austerity has devastated its economy as thoroughly as military defeat devastated Germany real Greek G.D.P. per capita fell 26 percent from 2007 to 2013, compared with a German decline of 29 percent from 1913 to 1919.
European creditors should realize that flexibility giving Greece a chance to recover is in their own interests. They may not like the new leftist government, but its a duly elected government whose leaders are, from everything Ive heard, sincerely committed to democratic ideals. Europe could do a lot worse and if the creditors are vengeful, it will.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/16/opinion/paul-krugman-weimar-on-the-aegean.html
Reparations (austerity) forced on Germany after WWI backfired. Austerity on Greece will do the same.