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dipsydoodle

(42,239 posts)
Sun Mar 3, 2013, 08:20 AM Mar 2013

Greece faces bailout review, plays down public sector job losses

Source: Reuters

(Reuters) - Officials from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund return to Athens on Sunday to assess Greece's performance under a bailout plan as the government plays down the prospect of public sector job cuts.

The heads of the "troika" mission from the EU, IMF and the European Central Bank will meet Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras to review progress on privatisations, tax administration reforms, bank recapitalisation and steps to shrink the public sector.

International lenders unlocked aid in December after Greece's coalition government adopted austerity measures to bring the bailout plan back on track, with Athens aiming for a primary budget surplus this year for the first time since 2002.

Greece's euro zone partners and the IMF have urged strict adherence to the plan to shore up public finances, a line echoed by the head of the Euro Working Group of senior officials who prepare decisions of euro zone finance ministers.

Read more: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/03/02/uk-greece-bailout-idUKBRE9210AR20130302

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Greece faces bailout review, plays down public sector job losses (Original Post) dipsydoodle Mar 2013 OP
A budget surplus? another_liberal Mar 2013 #1
And the worker pays for the recapitalization of the banks. fasttense Mar 2013 #2
 

another_liberal

(8,821 posts)
1. A budget surplus?
Sun Mar 3, 2013, 09:11 AM
Mar 2013

If Athens is able to show a budget surplus this year it will only be through a feat of "creative accounting." Not that some tiny "surplus" would matter anyway to the nearly one third of Greek workers currently without jobs. This is just more lipstick on the same old austerity pig, more imaginary success for wealthy bankers and more real suffering for the vast majority of Greeks.

 

fasttense

(17,301 posts)
2. And the worker pays for the recapitalization of the banks.
Sun Mar 3, 2013, 09:12 AM
Mar 2013

From the link:

"Athens wants to avoid public sector layoffs with unemployment already at a record 27 percent and likely to rise as the economy is projected to shrink 4.5 percent this year.

But the government must transfer 25,000 employees to a so-called mobility scheme by the end of this year, where workers will earn reduced pay for a year and may face layoffs if vacant spots are not found in the broader public sector.

Finance Minister Stournaras played down talk of imminent job cuts in comments to Sunday's To Vima newspaper: "The public sector has shrunk by 75,000 people in the last one and a half years, there will be no layoffs," he was quoted as saying.

Bank recapitalization will be another topic on the agenda. Bankers have asked for an extension to an end-April deadline to wrap up a scheme to restore the solvency of the country's four biggest banks."

And the US intensifies it's austerity measures in a continuing economic depression.

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