Seldom has the world watched an election anywhere as anxiously as it awaited the result of the election in Greece yesterday. To the great relief of the euro zone and the world's economic outlook, Greeks voted for the more sensible of their leading parties. The result was closer than the
Editorial: Greek vote spells hope for recovery
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Leader of the New Democracy conservative party Antonis Samaras surrounded by media. Photo / AP
The triumph of common sense in Greece could be matched, when the time is right, by more generous concessions by Germany and other well governed euro states. A meeting of the G20 leaders that began in Mexico overnight is bound to put further pressure on Chancellor Angela Merkel to agree to some relaxation of the terms of the latest bail-out. But she should not be asked to commit Germans to anything definite until a new Greek government has been formed and its requests are known.
In the wake of the election the G20 would do better to keep the heat on Greece, endorsing the fiscal standards that a common currency requires. It remains untenable to ask poorer places such as the Baltic states, which have endured difficult economic reforms, to bear the borrowing costs of countries that would be free to vote themselves welfare entitlements and avoid the tax that would pay for it.
Tax avoidance, already rife in Greece, became epidemic in the lead-up to Sunday's election. Even a candidate on the winning party's list was caught up in an alleged illegal transfer of US$1 million to a London bank. The party's leader, Antonis Samaras, was a late convert to bail-out requirements. As Opposition leader he attacked the 2010 crackdown on tax avoidance that was a condition of the first bail-out agreement.
It was not until he helped bring down the government of George Papandreou a year ago that Mr Samaras came to believe Greece could be forced out of the euro. It has taken him two elections now to convince enough Greeks of the danger. As their new Prime Minister he could take some decisive steps. If he does, the world might heave a sigh of relief and confidence might be rekindled for a global recovery.