Thursday June 20, 2013 Search
Weather | Athens
34o C
22o C
News
Business
Comment
Life
Sports
Community
Survival Guide
Greek Edition
Package foresees 4.5 bln euros in pension cuts

Representatives of the three parties in the coalition government were on Thursday to continue talks aimed at nailing down an 11.5-billion-euro austerity package for 2013 and 2014 after sources revealed to Kathimerini that the cuts being proposed are even harsher than expected.

These include the abolition of the traditional holiday payments (at Easter, Christmas and summer) for all pensioners, not just former civil servants. It also emerged that the ax will likely fall on all pensions above 800 euros, with cuts starting at 2 percent and reaching 20 percent for the highest levels. The government hopes to raise 4.5 billion euros through pension cuts alone.

According to sources, objections were raised during a meeting between party officials on Wednesday night to proposed cuts to social welfare benefits and benefits for the disabled.

The proposed package also foresees fresh cuts to healthcare, to the tune of 1.3 billion euros, some 500 million euros of cutbacks in defense and 750 million euros in cutbacks to local authority subsidies.

Cuts to the so-called «special salaries» of certain categories of civil servants such as judicial and military staff as well as priests will reach the 12 percent level, according to the proposal which aims to raise 800 million euros in this area. It is likely that police officers and other members of security forces with dangerous jobs, will be excluded from this measure.

As for civil servants, the likely scenario involves between 35,000 and 40,000 employees leaving the public sector by 2014, either through early retirement or for failing to pass an evaluation. Another 110,000 are to leave the service by 2015 either through retirement or the termination of their contracts, Kathimerini understands.

Officials of of the Democratic Left, the smallest party in the coalition, have reportedly proposed that cuts to pensions' holiday payments be scaled according to income while calling for additional cuts to health sector procurement, defense and clerics' salaries.

Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras, who is spearheading efforts to draft the package, has said the measures will be ready by next week in time for a scheduled visit to Athens by representatives of Greece's foreign creditors, the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund, known as the troika. The troika officials are to arrive on September 5 and travel to Nicosia on September 13 ahead of a Eurogroup summit there on September 14.

Stournaras is to meet with troika chiefs on September 9, Finance Ministry sources said on Thursday.

ekathimerini.com , Thursday August 30, 2012 (11:15)  
Third meeting of party leaders in less than a week aims to clinch agreement on ERT, power-sharing
Troika takes a ‘pause’ amid coalition concerns
Minister warns of delays in hospital supply tenders and of price-fixing
New sustainable development director decries fund waste
BUSINESS
Germans to help create savings banks
German experts are preparing to help in the creation of savings bank networks in Greece’s regions. Addressing an event organized by the German-Hellenic Chamber of Commerce and Industry in At...
TOURISM
Fira a firm Greek holiday favorite
The traditional settlement of Fira on the southern Aegean island of Santorini appears to be the most popular tourism destination among Greeks for the June 22-24 bank holiday weekend, accordi...
Inside Business
SOCCER
Dutch coach Huub Stevens aims to unite PAOK fans
New PAOK coach Huub Stevens has called for unity among fans after taking charge of the Greek club whose players said they feared for their lives last season because of regular protests. Gree...
CANOE
Tribute paid to Andreas Kiligkaridis
Greek canoeing champion Andreas Kiligkardis died on Wednesday after losing his battle against leukemia. The 37-year-old had been in a coma since last Tuesday at a hospital in Poland - where ...
Inside Sports
COMMENTARY
It´s not brain surgery
The people of this country need to see their politicians start producing real, tangible results. One of the leading factors behind the anger and frustration felt by so many Greeks toward the...
EDITORIAL
Holding the course
There is no room for ego trips and personal whims when the country’s survival is at stake. The three party leaders who agreed just a year ago to join forces in order to govern the country mu...
Inside Comment
SPONSORED LINK: FinanzNachrichten.de
 RECENT NEWS
1. Germans to help create savings banks
2. Fira a firm Greek holiday favorite
3. Eurogroup to vote on separate funding for credit sector recap
4. Gov’t eyes tranche frontloading
5. Third meeting of party leaders in less than a week aims to clinch agreement on ERT, power-sharing
6. Troika takes a ‘pause’ amid coalition concerns
more news
Today
This Week
1. Fira a firm Greek holiday favorite
2. Germans to help create savings banks
3. Gov’t eyes tranche frontloading
4. Eurogroup to vote on separate funding for credit sector recap
5. Greeks: second happiest people in Europe, despite crisis, says study
6. Jean-Claude Juncker on the Greek crisis, then and now
Today
This Week
1. Greece cut to emerging market at MSCI in world first
2. ERT journalists defy closing down order to continue broadcasts as coalition faces severe test
3. Journalist unions call media strike to protest ERT closure as employees continue broadcasting
4. European Broadcasting Union expresses dismay at closure of ERT, calls on PM for reversal
5. Cyprus president Anastasiades criticises bailout terms
6. New national broadcaster to be named NERIT SA
Advertiser Link
Amundi, ç Íï.1 åôáéñåßá ôçò Åõñþðçò óôç Äéá÷åßñéóç Äéáèåóßìùí
   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.