Greece and its financial overseers agreed on terms for continued bailout
 payments on Monday. The agreement is cause for relief — without it 
Greece would go bankrupt. But, at the same time, it is no cause for 
celebration — indeed, quite the opposite. Greece must eventually carry 
out painful reforms. But the precondition for these reforms is not the 
austerity demanded by the agreement but economic revival.        
 
Greece is already in critical condition and Monday’s agreement will only
 make things worse. Years of austerity and depression have poisoned 
Greek politics, idled more than one in four of its workers (and nearly 
two in three of its young people) and torn holes in its social safety 
net.        
These sacrifices have choked off investment and squandered human 
resources. Experts say there is little chance that further sacrifices 
will revive Greece’s economy or make its debt burden more sustainable. 
Yet that is just what the European Commission, European Central Bank and
 International Monetary Fund have again insisted on. Greece’s prime 
minister, Antonis Samaras, felt he had no choice but to accept. He 
agreed to cut public-sector paychecks and eliminate 15,000 Civil Service
 jobs — not by attrition, but by dismissing the current jobholders.     
   
Greece’s Civil Service is bloated, patronage-ridden and inefficient, and
 it clearly needs reform as part of a broader program of economic 
renewal and revival. But throwing thousands more out of work when the 
unemployment rate is 27 percent is not a promising path to real reform, 
especially when done on the orders of foreign bankers. The last such 
round of public-sector cuts, in June, which shut down the state 
broadcasting system, badly backfired and nearly shattered Mr. Samaras’s 
fragile governing coalition.        
Monday’s agreement
 also calls for a staggered payment schedule that will allow the lenders
 to suspend bailout payments if Greece has not met its job-cutting 
commitments by July 19.        
In brief, the more implausible austerity becomes as an economic remedy, 
the more unchallengeable it seems to become as a political mantra. Its 
most consistent advocate, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, is up for
 re-election this September. She is unlikely to change her tune — which 
is popular among German taxpayers — before that. Nor is she likely to 
change it if she wins another term.        
Other lenders like the International Monetary Fund seem more troubled by
 evidence that austerity has done real damage to the Greek economy. But 
that realization has, so far, brought no change in policy and no relief 
to suffering Greeks.        
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