Wednesday May 22, 2013 Search
Weather | Athens
30o C
20o C
News
Business
Comment
Life
Sports
Community
Survival Guide
Greek Edition
The 2013 Greek budget: submitting it was the easy part

By Yiannis Mouzakis*

Two days after the Greek Prime Minister made the surprise announcement that the negotiations with the troika are completed; his finance minister submitted on Wednesday to Parliament the draft budget for 2013.

The Greek coalition government, with very little room to meet its pre-election pledges of re-negotiation of the terms and changes to the subscribed policy mix, presented a budget that goes even against the recent rhetoric of the IMF that heavily frontloaded fiscal consolidations have a damaging effect on economic activity and hamper any efforts of recovery.

The approximately 9.5 billion euros – 4.5% of GDP - of austerity measures that the government plans to implement next year are reflected on the revised macroeconomic framework where the recession in 2013 is now seen at 4.5%, more in line with the recent IMF research findings that 1% of fiscal consolidation translates into 0.9% to 1.7% of economic output. The 183 billion euros of GDP projected in 2013 brings Greece’s economic output back to 2004 levels.

The budget sees average unemployment next year at 22.8%. Considering it stands at 25.1% as of July this year and is expected to accelerate further in the second half of the year, the 2013 unemployment projection seems optimistic.

Equally optimistic is the forecast for the decline in private consumption that the government sees at -7%, compared to -7.7% in 2012. Considering that the majority of the measures are coming from cuts in pensions, public sector wages and their benefits for Christmas, Easter and summer - consumer groups that have a high marginal propensity to consume – a slowing down of the rate of decline of private consumption is unlikely.

The draft budget also represents an open admission of the challenges that austerity is posing on the revenue side of the budget: 2012 state revenues will be 3.7 billion euros off target and the projection for 2013 is for a further decline to 46.3 billion euros.

Compensation of public administration employees is reduced by a further 10% at 16 billion euros, pensions expenditure sees a further decline of 9%, and interest payments albeit reduced to 10.2 billion euros, still represent a sizable 5.6% of next year’s GDP.

If execution goes as planned, the budget will next year have a primary surplus of 748 million euros, or 0.4% of GDP, and an overall deficit of 5.2% of GDP or 9.4 billion euros.

The debt burden next year is seen at a staggering 189% of GDP, which further highlights the need for an official sector involvement in a decisive restructuring of maturities, loan repayments and interest payments if Greece’s public debt is to get back to a sustainable path.

Overall, the Greek coalition government submitted a budget that translates into a severe reduction in standards of living, taking the cumulative economic contraction during the ‘troika era’ to 21%.

And to think that submitting the budget was the easy part.

* Yiannis Mouzakis is an economics content specialist for a global content supplier. He blogs at The Prodigal Greek (http://theprodigalgreek.wordpress.com/)

ekathimerini.com , Thursday November 1, 2012 (10:25)  
Keeping the pirates at bay
The writing on the wall
Dividing lines that never fade
After China, what next?
Patra bank targeted once again
Police were seeking the perpetrators of an attack targeting an ATM machine outside a bank in the port city of Patra, western Greece, in the early hours of Wednesday. No injuries were reporte...
Young actor dies
Thomas Protopapas died at the intensive care unit of KAT hospital in Kifissia, northern Athens,on Tueday. The 26-year-old actor had suffered extensive injuries in a road accident on Attiki O...
Inside News
TOURISM
More visitors expected from China, says tourism minister
Greece is poised to host an increasing number of visitors from China, some of whom are expected to visit the country outside of the traditional tourist season, according to Tourism Minister ...
Greek media firms owe 51.9 mln euros in unpaid social security tax, minister says
Greek media companies owe more than 50 million euros in unpaid social security contributions, which is roughly equivalent to the annual budget of the journalists’ insurance fund EDOEAP. Labo...
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
SPONSORED LINK: FinanzNachrichten.de
 RECENT NEWS
1. Patra bank targeted once again
2. Young actor dies
3. More visitors expected from China, says tourism minister
4. Three women to face prosecutor over Skouries protest
5. Greek media firms owe 51.9 mln euros in unpaid social security tax, minister says
6. Greek current account deficit down 42.5% y-o-y to 1.3bln euros in March
more news
Today
This Week
1. Son stabs mother to death in Agrinio
2. Arson attack causes extensive damage to Glyfada EOPYY branch
3. Greek current account deficit down 42.5% y-o-y to 1.3bln euros in March
4. Greece's public debt rose slightly to 168.6 percent of GDP in Q1 of 2013
5. European stocks decline before EU meeting
6. EU leaders look to end Apple-style tax avoidance schemes
Today
This Week
1. Golden Dawn MP ejected from Parl't after 'Heil Hitler' incident [UPDATE]
2. Greece: A reality check
3. Greek economy shrank by 5.3% in Q1 of 2013 as recession continues
4. Do trophies mean anything after all?
5. Greece isn't turning the corner
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.