What Would Happen For Greece After A "Speech Of Hope"?

 | Jun 09, 2015 11:59PM ET

Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis recently penned a Project Syndicate essay in which he challenged German Chancellor Angela Merkel to give a "Speech of Hope" in Greece in the manner of US Secretary of State James Byrnes did in 1946. In that speech, Byrnes' speech signaled an about face in American foreign policy towards Germany by reversing its intention to de-industrialize the conquered and shattered nation:

Byrnes’ speech signaled to the German people a reversal of that punitive de-industrialization drive. Of course, Germany owes its post-war recovery and wealth to its people and their hard work, innovation, and devotion to a united, democratic Europe. But Germans could not have staged their magnificent post-war renaissance without the support signified by the “Speech of Hope.”

Prior to Byrnes’ speech, and for a while afterwards, America’s allies were not keen to restore hope to the defeated Germans. But once President Harry Truman’s administration decided to rehabilitate Germany, there was no turning back. Its rebirth was underway, facilitated by the Marshall Plan, the US-sponsored 1953 debt write-down, and by the infusion of migrant labor from Italy, Yugoslavia, and Greece.

Varoufakis went on to challenge Merkel to deliver a similar "Speech of Hope" and presumably echo the same kinds of policies that America did with Germany in 1946. Varoufakis seems to be very good at evoking the kinds hope that Greece can embark on a growth path to prosperity:

Europe could not have united in peace and democracy without that sea change. Someone had to put aside moralistic objections and look dispassionately at a country locked in a set of circumstances that would only reproduce discord and fragmentation across the continent. The US, having emerged from the war as the only creditor country, did precisely that.

Suppose we were to fantasize for a moment and imagined that Varoufakis go everything he wanted, namely some form of debt relief and a stimulative Marshall Plan. What would happen to Greece under such circumstances?

The Competitive Advantage of Nations
To answer that question, I would use a development economics framework by following the work of Michael Porter, who wrote The Economy of Cities and Cities and the Wealth of Nations. The ideas of Porter and Jacobs are quite similar. One of Porter's formulas for success is the existence and development of industry clusters, e.g. Silicon Valley, which becomes a hub that spawns industry excellence, development and employment. Jacobs' work more or less says the same thing, except that her unit of development is the city-state instead of Porter`s focus on country-specific development.

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Now consider the cases of post-war Germany and Greece today. Even though it was shattered by war, 1946 Germany was endowed with a considerable amount of human capital. The Germans had a tradition of excellence in science and engineering that went back years. As an example, German companies had a technological lead in chemicals in the late 19th and early 20th Century. Today, companies like Bayer and BASF carry on that tradition of German chemistry. The Second World War was marked by German "wonder weapons". It was therefore not a surprise that there was a scramble for former German rocket scientists after the war.

What competitive advantages does Greece have today?

A glance at the chart of GDP per capita (via Ian Bremmer) shows that Greece is one of the poorest regions in the eurozone, with the "rich" eurozone regions being Germany, northern Italy, northern Spain, the Low Countries and Ireland.