Now that we've killed the car industry perhaps it's a good time to visit some interesting thoughts from "our Yanis"
On Australia and its debt.
"Australia has very talented people, it has very talented small companies. But what it lacks is a government which is willing to do that which the American government has been doing for the last 60 years or so.
What Australians do not understand is that there is a major disconnect between the United States' official ideology and its practice.
"Because what Australians do not understand is that there is a major disconnect between the United States' official ideology and its practice. The ideology is one of free market, but the practice is one of a state that is extremely activist, and is investing very heavily in whole networks of innovation and production: the military industrial complex, the medical industrial complex, even the prison industrial complex. They are investing heavily through the state to create networks of value creation, and actually producing things. And Australia is moving very rapidly into divesting itself of actual production."
The Australian government's aversion to spending hasn't always been the norm. Varoufakis uses Wi-Fi as an example, a key patent of which was invented by the publicly-funded CSIRO an Australian organisation that had its funding cut by $115m in the 2014 budget. The government argued that bailing out Holden and Toyota amounted to corporate welfare, but that kind of thinking belies the extent of government involvement in successful economies.
The idea that individuals create wealth and that all governments do is come along and tax them is what Varoufakis calls "a preposterous reversal of the truth".
"There is an amazing myth in our enterprise culture that wealth is created individually and then appropriated by the state to be distributed.
"We are conceptualising what is happening in society as if we are an archipelago of Robinson Crusoes, everybody on an island, creating our own thing individually and then a boat comes along and collects it and redistributes it. It's not true. We are not individual producers, we produce things collectively."
He points to an iPhone.
"This machine, inside of it, contains technologies that were created collectively. Not only through collaboration but a lot of public funding. Every single technology in there was created by government grant."
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...kis-australias-negative-gearing-is-scandalous
On Australia and its debt.
"Firstly, Australia does not have a debt problem. The idea that Australia is on the verge of becoming a new Greece would be touchingly funny if it were not so catastrophic in its ineptitude. Australia does not have a public debt problem, it has a private debt problem.
"Truth number two: the Australian social economy is not sustainable as it is. At the moment, if you look at the current account deficit, Australia lives beyond its means and when I say Australia, I mean upper-middle-class people. The luxurious lifestyle is not supported by the Australian economy. It's supported by a bubble, and it is never a good idea to rely on the proposition that a bubble will always be there to support you.
"So private debt is the problem. And secondly, because of this private debt, you have a bubble, which is constantly inflated through money coming into this country for speculative purposes."
Varoufakis is unequivocal in his conviction that current growth which he likens to a Ponzi scheme needs to be replaced with growth that comes from producing goods.
"Australia is switching away from producing stuff. Even good companies like Cochlear, who have been very innovative in the past, have been financialised. They're moving away from doing stuff to shuffling paper around. That would be my first priority [if I were Australian treasurer]: how to go back to actually doing things."