Friday May 24, 2013 Search
Weather | Athens
29o C
17o C
News
Business
Comment
Life
Sports
Community
Survival Guide
Greek Edition
Coalition seeks final policy mix

Reducing pensions under 600 euros and forcing those who are eligible for retirement next year or in 2013 to work an extra year are among the measures the government is considering in order to complete the 11.5 billion euros of cuts that it will have to present to troika officials when they return to Athens on August 27.

Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras is due to meet the representatives of the European Central Bank, European Commission and International Monetary Fund on Sunday, ahead of their departure from Greece. By the time they return, the coalition government will have to finalize the package of cuts, which Stournaras and Prime Minister Antonis Samaras sees as vital to earning a positive review from the troika in September and convincing Greece’s eurozone partners to continue with the bailout.

Samaras is due to discuss the measures, as well as the government’s bid to speed up the privatization process, with his coalition partners -- PASOK’s Evangelos Venizelos and Fotis Kouvelis of Democratic Left -- during a meeting on Monday.

Although Kouvelis and Venizelos have agreed in principle to the cuts, finalizing the details could yet prove difficult.

Sunday’s Kathimerini understands the coalition will abandon its intention to raise the retirement age from 65 to 67, although this would have saved 1 billion euros, and instead remove the adjustment period introduced in the 2010 pension reform. This would mean that nobody could retire under the age of 65 from next year.

Also, government officials have decided against cutting just pensions above 1,400 euros, which form the minority of retirement payments in Greece, but to reduce all pensions by about 5 to 6 percent. This would mean that someone earning a pension of 700 euros would lose about 35 euros per month.

Sources said the switch is a result of cuts to large pensions not providing enough savings. The ceiling for the combined total of basic and supplementary pensions is currently 3,690 euros. Lowering it to 2,500 would only save 25 million euros. There is also concern that the reduction would be successfully challenged in court.

Agreeing the details of the 2013-14 cuts is one of the goals the government is aiming to achieve in the next few weeks to secure a positive review. The other two are implementing the 3 billion euros in fiscal measures due this year and moving forward with structural reforms and privatizations.

ekathimerini.com , Saturday August 4, 2012 (17:32)  
New 5-euro banknotes no good for transport tickets
Coalition chiefs to tackle anti-racism bill on Monday
Irish model inspires Samaras as Stournaras eyes primary surplus, more debt relief
A child goes missing ‘every day,’ police says
ECONOMY
New scheme for 75,000 jobs starts in January
Labor Minister Yiannis Vroutsis announced on Thursday a new government initiative, to apply from January 2014, that will offer 75,000 new jobs for young people. In the context of the governm...
TRANSPORT
Western Cyclades take charge over sea links
The islands of Kythnos, Serifos, Sifnos, Kimolos and Milos have decided to embark on an ambitious plan to set up and launch their own ferry service in a bid to rekindle tourism in the Wester...
Inside Business
SOCCER
PAOK bounces back to win at Asteras
PAOK recovered some of the ground lost in the Super League playoffs by beating fellow Champions League-spot contender Asteras 2-1 at Tripoli on Wednesday, while PAS Giannina and Atromitos sh...
BASKETBALL
Playoffs begin in basketball with Rethymno upsetting PAOK
The league that in the last three years has produced the European basketball champion entered its playoffs on Tuesday and Wednesday with the first games of the quarterfinal round, with AGO R...
Inside Sports
COMMENTARY
Citizens´ self-defense
The dramatic appeal for a national mobilization in the face of a heightened threat of devastating forest fires this summer, which Public Order Minister Nikos Dendias voiced in Parliament on ...
COMMENTARY
Uncomfortably unique
Far-right Golden Dawn has been catapulted onto center stage of Greek politics. That’s almost an achievement for the post-1974 political system that emerged from the collapse of a pathetic mi...
Inside Comment
SPONSORED LINK: FinanzNachrichten.de
 RECENT NEWS
1. New scheme for 75,000 jobs starts in January
2. Western Cyclades take charge over sea links
3. Troika tells Greek lenders to stick to local banking
4. IMF team due in Greece on June 4 for new round of talks
5. New 5-euro banknotes no good for transport tickets
6. Coalition chiefs to tackle anti-racism bill on Monday
more news
Today
This Week
1. Eurozone decisions on direct bank recap and debt relief for Greece imminent, says Dijsellbloem
2. German anti-euro party sees answer to euro woes in mass exit
3. Quake measuring 4.1 Richter hits Crete
4. Europe’s leaders say no to austerity, don’t say yes to stimulus
5. Syrian refugees held in 'very poor conditions' in Greece, Amnesty says
6. Commission withdraws ban on olive oil jugs in restaurants
Today
This Week
1. Greece: A reality check
2. Golden Dawn MP ejected from Parl't after 'Heil Hitler' incident [UPDATE]
3. Slovenian philospher Zizek proposes 'gulag' for those who do not support SYRIZA
4. Greece isn't turning the corner
5. On a dangerous path
6. Eurozone decisions on direct bank recap and debt relief for Greece imminent, says Dijsellbloem
Advertiser Link
Last minute info: intensive Greek language lesson in Thessaloniki, 28/5-7/6/2013 – low fees
   Find us ...
  ... on
Twitter
     ... on Facebook   
About us  |  Subscriptions  |  Advertising  |  Contact us  |  Athens Plus  |  International Herald Tribune  |  RSS
Copyright © 2013, H KAΘHMEPINH All Rights Reserved.