Exclusively available inside The International Herald Tribune in Greece and Cyprus  
  Saturday October 24, 2009 - Archive
Current Edition | Athens Stock Exchange | Useful Information | Greek Edition | Site Search  
  Search
Home page
ENGLISH EDITION
Date
24/10/2009  
Frontpage
News
Commentaries
S/E Europe
Features
Business. & Fin.
Arts & Leisure
Sports
Weather
Classifieds
Cartoon Archive
  RSS
INFORMATION
Company Profile
Health & Emergency
COMMENTARIES
A German example

By Nikos Xydakis

“I inherited a lot of money that I don’t need,” wrote 69-year-old Peter Folmer, one of 44 rich Germans who co-signed a public appeal to their government to tax them at a rate of 5 percent of their inherited wealth.

The head of the appeal, a retired doctor by the name of Dieter Lehmkuhl, was prompted to act when the German government channeled tens of billions of euros into rescuing the country’s banking system from collapse. The good doctor, certainly not the richest person in Europe’s strongest economy, said:

“I get angry when I think that we suddenly came up with so much money for banks, money we didn’t have beforehand to fund social, educational or environmental programs.”

His response was to offer something to his country, to his financially less well-off compatriots, to the society in which he lived.

The initiative by 44 well-off Germans is a tangible expression of social conscience and patriotism.

And let’s not rush to point out that these are after all Germans, Protestants, nationalists, social democrats and the like, and that “here” things are different.

Societies don’t progress with stereotypes, with excuses and fixed ideas that are merely a flimsy cover-up for cowardice, greed and sterile selfishness.

What is happening in Germany could happen here, where there are large endowments, dormant fortunes and huge untaxed surpluses.

Of course there are 44 Greek patriots with surplus wealth who could take a similar initiative and prompt others to act likewise, thereby raising vital democratic issues, no matter how indirectly, such as the consensual redistribution of wealth and the strengthening of social cohesion.

Will we see 44 Greeks doing something similar? We shall see.

Print article | e-mail


[ Front Page ] [ News ] [ Commentaries ] [ S/E Europe ]
[ Features ] [ Business & Finance ] [ Arts & Leisure ] [ Sports ]
[ Subscriptions ] [ Editor ] [ Webmaster ]
Company Profile | Health & Emergency

Commentaries
COMMENTARY

A German example
50 YEARS AGO

October 24, 1959
CARTOON

The Cartoon of the Day
EDITORIAL

PR is not the right vehicle

English Edition - Greece's International English Language Newspaper
Exclusively available inside The International Herald Tribune in Greece and Cyprus
© 2010 H KAΘHMEPINH All rights reserved.