Thursday, February 19, 2015

Greek Finance Minister, Game Theory and the Big Showdown

In an earlier and rather detailed blog post, I had talked about the Greek debt situation and the stories that surround it. I have decided to post another blog entry primarily about the game theory and the Greek financial minister, Yanis Varoufakis, especially due to his showdown with Germany and the developing crisis in the European Union. The news has just hit today that Germany has rejected the Greek proposal to extend the bailout program by an additional 6 months. The Syriza government had been under enormous pressure by both the European monetary authorities and the officials of various European financial ministries to continue the bailout program despite rejecting the program itself. This article will try to explain the background of the Greek Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis, in more detail, but also will go deeper into how his research interest in economics, Game Theory, has also come into play during the midst of this big showdown between the new leftist Syriza government and the European monetary authorities.

The Greek Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis, has now become very well-known within the politics of the continent due to his showdown with the European monetary authorities and his penchant for his plain dress combined with a defiant attitude towards what the Troika had committed to his native country of Greece, but also within the economic world with his unorthodox economic views. In two articles, one commentary article written by him in the Guardian newspaper several years back and another article on the left-liberal activist site, CounterPunch, it illustrates a man who is determined not to just change the policies of austerity and liberal capitalism in Greece, but throughout the entire European Union. In the first article, we can picture a man who was trained within the confines of mainstream economics, but had defined himself in 2012 as a Marxist. He did not describe himself as the prototypical Marxist, but one that is committed to changing the economic dimensions within Europe. In the article, he described the economics within the continent as one that is committed to the form of neoliberal capitalism, but his progressive politics of the left will be rejuvenated from the doldrums to saving European capitalism. From this article, we can see a man who is dedicated to the leftist ideology of changing Europe and the economics within the continent towards one that is certainly socialist both in policy and in application.

The second article describes Mr. Varoufakis' plans in detail about changing the dynamics of the European economic system into one that promotes growth and not austerity. The tone of the article also described how a previously unknown Greek economist had stared down the monetary bureaucrats of the European Union and sent some of them scared. It could be best said that Varoufakis had utilized some of his training as an economist, especially in the arts of game theory, to give what little the Greek government had previously into an enormous advantage over the people at the Eurogroup. For those, who are not familiar with Game theory, here's a short BBC article that explores the dimensions of the games (which include possible applications of zero-sum games and of the prisoner's dilemma) that Greece has been playing with the Troika, the Eurogroup and other European countries like Germany. He also has written an article in the New York Times on the big showdown with the European monetary authorities, which includes Germany and Angela Merkel. In the article, he lambasted how they "should not" be utilizing game theory with each other over the debt deal, but should be best focused on how to provide the average population a way out of desperate poverty and destitution. It does make a lot sense to anyone who has read his article, but Varoufakis has been utilizing all sorts of strategies that are based on game theory in dealing with the European monetary authorities! In an article by a popular Forbes contributor, Tim Worstall, there's absolute no room for game theory here! Regardless of whether most people have agreed with Greece's accession into the Eurozone or with the following policy decisions that the European monetary authorities have undertaken, Greece and the European Union are in trouble.

Exactly how much trouble are the European Union, Greece and the Eurozone in? A good question might be to ask about the other debt troubles that various European nations such as Spain, Italy, Portugal and even France have in the future. Germany is not even immortal with its enormous debt burden that it has also managed to start decreasing in the last couple of years, but another crisis could exacerbate the debt levels even in Germany which are already alarmingly high. I strongly disagree with a recent Economist article on how Greece could have made the Eurozone work better. Greece could not have made the Eurozone work better, as there are numerous other economies that are facing similar problems as Greece. I believe that with the Greek Finance Minister's dangerous moves may put the European Union and the Eurozone at its brink, but there is also ample room for finding a balance between the views of both Germany and Greece. By rejecting each other's counter-proposals, they are putting the world economy at risk with their latest proposals. Worried Greek depositors and international investors will now brace for the final showdown between Greece and the European monetary authorities. Let's hope we don't wake up to see an avoidable financial crisis.







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