On 1 December, a 13-year-old girl died after inhaling carbon monoxide fumes in the Greek city of Thessaloniki. She and her unemployed mother had been trying to use a makeshift stove to heat their freezing flat, having had their electricity cut off several months earlier. In Greece, austerity continues to kill.
The Greeks have few friends in our part of Europe, however, as I discovered at a recent Intelligence Squared debate on Germany and austerity at Cadogan Hall in London. "Why should hard-working northern Europeans pay for the Greeks?" asked a Dutch member of the audience. "The Greek railway is so inefficient that it would be cheaper to move everybody by taxi," sneered a German. There is a sense in southern Europe, suggested another audience member, that "money just grows on trees".
Isn't it odd that there is always money available to bail out banks but not people? As my fellow panellist Euclid Tsakalotos, a Greek economist and member of parliament for the left-wing Syriza party, put it to me afterwards: "Public debate has suffered a dumbing-down process." How, he asked, could "a world economic crisis of such proportions that has affected so many economies... be put down to differential work efforts"?
Work, or jobs, is what Greece lacks. One in four Greeks is unemployed; more than half of the country's youth cannot find work. Suicides are up; the birth rate is down. On a visit to Athens in 2012, I met Nikitas Kanakis, the chairman of the Greek branch of the charity Doctors of the World. "If the people cannot survive with dignity," he told me, "we cannot have a future."
It is dangerous, misguided and mendacious, as countless economists from the New York Times columnist Paul Krugman to the Financial Times commentator Martin Wolf have pointed out, to treat the eurozone's ongoing debt crisis as a modern-day morality tale. It isn't.
Record debts were caused by post-crash bank bailouts and a crisis-induced collapse in tax revenues. Take Spain. That country's downturn was the result not of excessive government spending or public debt but of the explosion of private debt, particularly in the real estate and banking sectors. Because of the crash, Spain's public-debt-to-GDP ratio morphed from being one of the lowest in the eurozone to one of the highest.
Overspending didn't cause the crisis but underspending is exacerbating it. Austerity isn't working. Don't take my word for it: a paper published in October by the European Commission's Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs revealed how the cumulative cost of fiscal self-flagellation across the eurozone was six per cent of GDP between 2011 and 2013. Crucially, the paper also pointed out that the catastrophically contractionary consequences of austerity in the southern debtor countries were "aggravated" by Germany and other northern creditor countries simultaneously cutting spending and raising taxes.
Another reason why we shouldn't moralise about debt is to avoid the charge of rank hypocrisy. After all, why pick on the Greeks, rather than the Germans? In the years before the crash - for example, from 2003 to 2004 - Germany persistently breached the budget deficit rules laid down in the EU's growth and stability pact; the then chancellor, Gerhard Schröder, demanded that his country be exempted from any penalties. In 2006, while Spain and Ireland were running budget surpluses, Germany was in deficit.
Then there's the German private sector. In 2008, as an investigation by Bloomberg subsequently revealed, over-leveraged German banks and financial institutions received secret loans from the US Federal Reserve.
Now go back 60 years. In 1953, Germany's postwar debt trap was lifted in London, at a conference of creditors in which the enormous amount of money the country owed was cut in half and the repayment period spread out over 30 years. One of those creditor countries was ... Greece.
Few historians would dispute that the astounding growth of the postwar German economy and the ascent of Germany to world economic power status wouldn't have happened without the London Debt Agreement. So why such a different attitude now? Why the mocking, demonising and punishing of debtor countries such as Greece, Spain and Portugal? Why the pretence that debt forgiveness isn't effective or doable or that it is without precedent?
It is perhaps because such a strategy would require bold and far-sighted leaders. What Europe needs right now is a Konrad Adenauer or a Charles de Gaulle, but the leaders it has to make do with are Angela Merkel and François Hollande.
Writing in the New Statesman in June 2012, I attracted the ire of Germanophiles and deficit hawks alike by accusing Merkel, who was elected for a third term as chancellor in September this year, of "destroying the European project, pauperising Germany's neighbours and risking a new global depression".
But this isn't merely the prejudice of a nasty British journalist picking on poor, defenceless Mutti. Listen to the former German chancellor, Helmut Kohl, who, according to Der Spiegel, has told friends: "She [Merkel] is destroying my Europe."
A break-up of the eurozone may be where we are headed if spending cuts take precedence over debt defaults and if the financial crisis continues to be cynically portrayed as a morality play. What the continent needs is a debt jubilee and a halt to austerity. Oh, and some solidarity. Otherwise, a second Great Depression beckons.
To borrow a line from the US economist Michael Hudson: "Debts that can't be repaid won't be repaid."
Mehdi Hasan is the political director of the Huffington Post UK and a contributing writer for the New Statesman, where this column is cross-posted