Greece ZZ rectangle

DirectDemocracyS

Global Political System & Organization

POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND FINANCIAL PROGRAM

FOR GREECE

Analysis • Criticism • Solutions • Development

Edition: June 2026

Author: DirectDemocracyS — International Strategy Department

PREAMBLE: Why Greece Needs a New System

Greece is a country with an undeniable historical heritage, natural wealth, high-quality human resources and enormous potential. However, for decades, its political system — the so-called “post-political duopoly” ND-PASOK, later supplemented by SYRIZA — has exhausted the strength of its people, plundered public wealth, allowed rampant corruption and made the country dependent on foreign lenders and the decisions of others.

The established system has proven inadequate for three structural weaknesses:

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) proposes a radically different path: a systematic, logical, realistic and fully functional alternative, based on logic, common sense, study, reality, truth, consistency and mutual respect. This is not a utopia. It is a system that already works, with tools that exist, with rules that have already been proven.

 

PART ONE

ANALYSIS OF THE CURRENT SITUATION

1.1 Political Landscape after the 2023 Elections

In the May-June 2023 elections, Kyriakos Mitsotakis' New Democracy (ND) party won for the second time in a row, gaining a parliamentary majority thanks to the electoral bonus of 50 seats. Today, in 2026, the Mitsotakis government is in the middle of its second four-year term, looking towards the 2027 elections.

Key features of the political landscape:

⚠ CRITICISM

The political dominance of a faction without a strong opposition and with weak judicial independence constitutes a serious danger to democracy. The “stability” that the government sells hides a worrying concentration of power.

1.2 Economic Reality: Shine and Dark Corners

Greece's macroeconomic data presents a contradictory picture. On the one hand, there are positive developments:

Indicator

Price (2025-2026)

GDP growth rate

+1.7% (Q2 2025)

Unemployment (total)

8.4% (Q4 2025) — lower than 2008

Youth unemployment (15-24)

~19-21% — above the EU average

Debt/GDP

~160% — reduction expected

Inflation

~2.9% on average 2025

Average monthly salary (gross)

~€1,566

Average monthly salary (net)

~€1,225

Minimum wage (net)

~€750

Athens rent (as % of minimum)

up to 50% of salary

On the other hand, the deeper problems remain unresolved:

💡 DDS ANALYSIS

The "growth" that is presented does not reach the majority of Greeks. It is growth for the few: tourism businesses, real estate, investors. The average worker continues to pay rent that constitutes 40-50% of his income and survives on wages that have not regained their lost purchasing power.

1.3 Social Crisis: The Invisible Wounds

1.3.1 Brain Drain — Brain Bleeding

Over the decade 2010-2020, more than 500,000 Greeks — mostly young and educated — left the country. Greece is characterized as the country with the highest unemployment rate among tertiary graduates in the entire eurozone. Corruption, meritocracy and lack of prospects are the main reasons.

1.3.2 Housing Crisis

In Athens, rent can absorb up to 50% of the minimum wage. The influx of foreign investors (Golden Visa, Airbnb), speculation and the lack of social housing have made housing a luxury for middle and low-income households.

1.3.3 Health System

Health spending has been drastically reduced during the crisis. The National Health System (NHS) is chronically underfunded. Mental health is particularly concerning: Greece is one of the countries with the highest rates of anxiety and depression in Europe.

1.3.4 Demographic Decline

Greece's population is shrinking. Aging, youth migration, and low birth rates threaten the long-term sustainability of the insurance and production system.

1.4 Corruption: The Cancer of the State

Greece ranks 59th in Transparency International's global corruption perception index (49 points/100), second worst in the eurozone for 2024. 54% of Greeks believe that corruption has influenced the results of public tenders. The "illegal" sector of the economy is estimated at around 20% of GDP.

Typical incidents 2024-2025:

⚠ DDS REVIEW

Corruption is not an individual or random phenomenon. It is the natural result of a system where power is concentrated, unchecked, and opaque. Without structural changes in the way decisions are made and resources are allocated, “anti-corruption” campaigns remain a travesty.

1.5 Energy, Environment and Climate Change

Greece faces immediate climate threats: catastrophic fires (Evia 2021, Dadia 2023), floods (Thessaly 2023), drought. At the same time, it is heavily dependent on imported fossil fuels, increasing energy vulnerability and costs.

1.6 Education and Research: The Seed That Is Not Watered

Greece produces one of the highest rates of tertiary education graduates in the EU, but at the same time has the highest unemployment rate of degree holders in the eurozone. This contradiction reveals a deep mismatch between the education system and the labour market. Public spending on research and development remains among the lowest in the EU.

 

PART TWO

THE DirectDemocracyS SYSTEM: PRINCIPLES AND TOOLS

Before presenting the specific policy proposals, it is necessary to explain the context within which they make sense: the DirectDemocracyS system.

2.1 Fundamental Principles

2.2 The Technology: ddsAI and allddsAI

DDS leverages two complementary technological tools:

🔑 KEY

In DDS, the citizen decides with complete, reliable, independent information — uninfluenced by oligarchic media, party propaganda, or algorithms of private-interest platforms.

2.3 The Five Special Groups (Specialist Groups)

Every official DDS member has access to five Special Teams, made up of volunteer experts, who provide specialized support in:

  1. Legal and constitutional issues
  2. Economy, finance and investments
  3. Social policy, health and education
  4. Technology, digital governance and security
  5. International relations and geopolitics

2.4 Why DDS is the Only System That Radically Solves Problems

Today’s representative democracy systems — even the best ones — have a structural flaw: they completely transfer power from the people to elected representatives, who quickly serve their own or their party’s interests. DDS solves this problem by keeping power in the hands of the people, using technology and institutions to ensure that each representative remains accountable in real time.

 

PART THREE

POLITICAL PROGRAM: SOLUTIONS FOR GREECE

A. POLITICAL REFORMS

A.1 — Radical Democratization of the Political System

Problem: The Greek parliamentary system — with a prime minister who is initially elected in person — concentrates power in the hands of a majority party. The parliament often functions as a theater for ratifying decisions already made elsewhere.

DDS Solution:

Example of application: In the DDS framework, a group of 5 members in the Tripoli area can submit a proposal for local water infrastructure. If the proposal is escalated to the 625 member level (prefecture level), it automatically becomes a national issue for consideration.

A.2 — Independent Judiciary and Anti-Corruption Institutions

Problem: The Greek judicial system is subject to political pressure. Scandals, such as the Lagarde list, have shown that the powerful enjoy impunity.

Solutions:

Expected results: Within 5 years of implementation, it is estimated that >€3 billion in revenue will be recovered annually from tax evasion and bribery, based on comparative experiences (Scandinavian countries, Estonia).

A.3 — Free and Independent Media

Problem: The concentration of media ownership in a few oligarchic groups — which themselves often hold public contracts — creates a dead-end system of interdependence. Citizens receive filtered information.

DDS Solutions:

B. ECONOMIC REFORMS

B.1 — Tax Justice and Combating Tax Evasion

Problem: Tax evasion costs the Greek government at least €5-6 billion annually. The burden of taxation falls disproportionately on salaried workers and small businesses, while big players avoid it.

DDS Solutions:

Expected results: +4-6 billion € additional annual tax revenue from more effective collection.

B.2 — Development Strategy: From Tourist Monoculture to Diversified Economy

Problem: Greece is overly dependent on tourism (~20% of GDP), the shipping sector, and European funding. This dependence makes the economy extremely vulnerable to external shocks.

DDS Solutions:

Example: Israel provides a useful example. With much more limited natural resources, it has created one of the strongest innovation ecosystems in the world, based on strategic human capital support. Greece has every opportunity to do the same — as long as power belongs to the people and not to the few.

B.3 — Fair Distribution of Wealth: Ending the Rich-Poor Dipole

DDS Solutions:

B.4 — National Wealth in the Hands of the People

This is a fundamental principle of DDS: the wealth of each country and the power to decide about your country must belong forever and exclusively to the people.

🇬🇷 EXAMPLE

Norway manages its hydrocarbon wealth through the Government Pension Fund (>$1.7 trillion), with every Norwegian citizen as an owner. Greece could implement a similar model for the hydrocarbons of the Southeastern Mediterranean.

C. FINANCIAL REFORMS

C.1 — Banking System: From Tool of Oligarchs to Public Benefit Infrastructure

Problem: After the crisis, Greek banks were bailed out with public money but recapitalized in favor of private foreign interests. Today, the four systemic banks represent oligopolistic power.

Solutions:

C.2 — Public Debt: New Negotiation Based on Justice

The Greek public debt (~160% of GDP) continues to mortgage the future of generations. Despite the reduction, it remains strategically obstructive.

DDS Solutions:

C.3 — Digital Economy and Transactions

D. SOCIAL REFORMS

D.1 — Health: NHS Useful, Affordable, Excellent

Solutions:

D.2 — Education: A Ladder to the Future, Not a Paper for Unemployment

Solutions:

D.3 — Housing: A Right, Not a Commodity

Solutions:

D.4 — Social Security and Pensions

Solutions:

D.5 — Immigration and Refugee

Greece is located on the geographical border of Europe and faces a disproportionate burden of migratory flows.

DDS Solutions:

E. ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT

E.1 — Energy Independence and Green Transition

Greece receives ~300 days of sunshine per year and has strong wind potential. Energy self-sufficiency is possible in 10-15 years.

E.2 — Tackling the Climate Crisis

F. FOREIGN POLICY AND GEOPOLITICS

P.1 — European Policy

Greece cannot thrive outside the EU, but neither can it thrive as a European “dependent” state. It needs a strong, active presence in European institutions.

St.2 — Cypriot and Greek-Turkish

The resolution of the Cyprus problem and the management of Greek-Turkish relations are a national necessity.

 

PART FOUR

IMPLEMENTATION OF THE DDS SYSTEM IN GREECE

4.1 The Implementation Path: Step by Step

The DDS does not call for an immediate replacement of the system — that would be contrary to its principles. It proposes a gradual, legal, electoral, and participatory transition:

  1. Phase 1 (1-2 years): Registration of members, creation of micro-groups (5 members) in each neighborhood, town, island. Goal: 1,000 groups in Greece.
  2. Phase 2 (2-3 years): Formation of groups of 25, 125 members — prefectural structure. Participation in local elections with DDS candidates.
  3. Phase 3 (3-5 years): National elections. Conquering parliamentary representation — one representative who implements a true grassroots mandate is enough.
  4. Phase 4 (5-10 years): Government participation — partial or full — with full implementation of DDS institutions.

4.2 The DDS Technology Platform in Greece

Greek citizens will have access to:

🔐 SECURITY

The DDS platform is designed to be impervious to external manipulation. No oligarch, no media outlet, no foreign government can buy, influence, or silence the will of its members.

4.3 Expected Results — A Realistic Forecast

Sector

Expected Result (10-year horizon)

Tax evasion

+5-7 billion € annual revenue from more effective collection

Corruption

Reduction >50% — estimate based on experience in Scandinavian countries

Brain Drain

Reversal: return estimate of 100,000+ professionals

Youth unemployment

Reduction from ~19% to <10% through growth strategy

Poverty

Reduction from 26% to <15% of the population

Energy independence

70%+ RES in the energy mix

Citizen satisfaction

Estimate: +40% based on Eurobarometer indicators

 

PART FIVE

AUTHENTIC DEMOCRACY: A VISION FOR GREECE

Greece gave the world the word “democracy.” Today, it has the historic opportunity — and necessity — to invent its true form for the 21st century.

True, complete, continuous, immediate, fast, capable (with our experts and our ddsAI and allddsAI technologies, which fully, correctly, neutrally and independently inform our members and groups), immediate, safe and protected democracy is not a utopia. It is the only logical answer to a system that has gone bankrupt.

DDS doesn't promise heaven. It promises something much more valuable: a system that works, that is explained, that is audited, that is constantly improving — and that belongs to you.

TODAY'S System

• Power to the few

• Opacity and corruption

• Wealth in foreign hands

• Manipulated information

• Citizens vote once every 4 years

The DDS System

• Power to every citizen

• Full transparency and accountability

• Wealth in the hands of the people

• Independent, neutral information

• The citizen decides every day

 

CHOICE: THE CHOICE IS YOURS

Greece does not need saviors, charismatic leaders, or foreign investors to “save” the economy. It needs a system that trusts the Greek people themselves — citizens, professionals, farmers, young people, the elderly — to decide together about their future.

This is exactly what DirectDemocracyS is. A system that says: "You own your country. You decide. You control. And no one can take that right away from you."

Democracy is not out there.

It is within each one of you.

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