Wednesday May 22, 2013 Search
Weather | Athens
30o C
20o C
News
Business
Comment
Life
Sports
Community
Survival Guide
Greek Edition
Coalition chiefs to meet to finalize 11.5 bn in cuts

The leaders of the three parties that form Greece’s coalition government face on Thursday the unhappy task of approving 11.5 billion euros in spending cuts over the next two years in the hope that this will help convince the country’s lenders to release further bailout funding for Athens.

Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is due to meet PASOK chief Evangelos Venizelos and Democratic Left leader Fotis Kouvelis to approve the savings, which have been drawn up by Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras after intensive discussions with his cabinet colleagues.

It is expected that apart from cuts in spending in various government departments, the measures will also include considerable reductions to state pensions, which will be one of the most politically sensitive issues for the coalition to handle, given that the three parties had committed in their election campaigns to avoiding “horizontal” cuts. It is estimated that about 5 billion euros in savings will come from areas that fall under the Labor Ministry’s auspices, such as pensions.

Sources said that an extra 300 million would be cut from the healthcare budget to help meet the target being demanded by the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. However, Health Minister Andreas Lykourentzos denied that spending on health would be limited to 1,500 euros per patient.

The government will also stress the importance of the privatization program in its talks with the troika. On Wednesday, former Public Power Corporation chief Takis Athanasopoulos was appointed the head of Greece’s privatization fund, TAIPED. This move, as well as the announcement of the closure of 21 public organizations, will be put forward by the coalition as evidence that Athens is taking the bailout terms seriously. “We have to ensure that the troika delivers a favorable review,” one of Samaras’s aides told Kathimerini. “There is no room for games.”

Stournaras is due to meet the heads of the EC, ECB and IMF team in Greece on Thursday afternoon. Samaras has a meeting with them on Friday.

First, the prime minister will hold talks with European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, who flew to Athens on Wednesday night. The government is hoping that Barroso’s visit will help show that Europe is standing by Greece through its difficulties. His visit is the first by any head of the three bodies that make up the troika since the bailout was agreed in May 2010.

ekathimerini.com , Wednesday Jul 25, 2012 (22:25)  
Anti-racism bill might go back to coalition leaders
EU leaders agree to step up fight against tax evasion
Greece sees backing for energy plans in European Council conclusions
SYRIZA takes step toward unity
MARKETS
ATHEX plans big New York roadshow
The Athens Exchange and the American-Hellenic Chamber are organizing the second investors’ forum in New York next month with the participation of 28 companies listed on the local bourse, up ...
FINANCE
Tax overhaul draft sees no declarations for single incomes
Taxpayers with just one source of annual income will not need to submit an income tax declaration as of next year according to the draft of the new tax code. According to the new set of regu...
Inside Business
TRACK & FIELD
Otto records world-leading jump in pole vault in Athens
Germany's Bjoern Otto recorded the world's leading performance in the men's pole vault at the Athens Street Pole Vault event that took place at Zappio, in central Athens, on Saturday afterno...
SOCCER
PAS Giannina stuns PAOK at Toumba
PAS Giannina upset PAOK at Thessaloniki on Sunday to take the lead at the Super League play-offs, while Asteras Tripolis rebounded from its loss at Ioannina in midweek to defeat Atromitos at...
Inside Sports
COMMENTARY
Keeping the pirates at bay
One of the biggest problems dragging the Greek economy down is the pressure placed on entrepreneurs aspiring to do business in sectors dominated by the “pirates” and “pimps” of the business ...
EDITORIAL
The writing on the wall
Greek taxpayers have had to pay dozens of millions of euros for the restoration and conservation of the capital’s landmark buildings, including Athens Polytechnic and the so-called neoclassi...
Inside Comment
SPONSORED LINK: FinanzNachrichten.de
 RECENT NEWS
1. ATHEX plans big New York roadshow
2. Tax overhaul draft sees no declarations for single incomes
3. TAIPED cancels Afandou tender
4. National’s recap in final stretch
5. Anti-racism bill might go back to coalition leaders
6. EU leaders agree to step up fight against tax evasion
more news
Today
This Week
1. Son stabs mother to death in Agrinio
2. Young actor dies
3. Greek current account deficit down 42.5% y-o-y to 1.3bln euros in March
4. Western Macedonia has fifth highest regional unemployment rate in EU, Eurostat finds
5. Arson attack causes extensive damage to Glyfada EOPYY branch
6. Greece's public debt rose slightly to 168.6 percent of GDP in Q1 of 2013
Today
This Week
1. Greece: A reality check
2. Golden Dawn MP ejected from Parl't after 'Heil Hitler' incident [UPDATE]
3. Greek economy shrank by 5.3% in Q1 of 2013 as recession continues
4. Greece isn't turning the corner
5. Do trophies mean anything after all?
6. Slovenian philospher Zizek proposes 'gulag' for those who do not support SYRIZA
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.