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Greece Against Possible Suspension of EU Voting Rights

Posted on 10 December 2010 by Apostolos Papapostolou



Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou on Friday spoke out strongly against Germany’s idea of sanctions against serial budget sinners, saying it would trigger a referendum in the country.

“I have told (German Chancellor) Angela Merkel and other EU politicians that if this is the case then I have to ask the Greek people to decide on this in a referendum,” he told parliament.

The euro came under renewed pressure after the European Union’s statistics office, Eurostat, announced that Greece’s budget deficit came in at 15.4 per cent in 2009, about 2 percentage points higher than the 13.6 per cent estimated in April this year.

The European Union will determine early next year whether it will extend the amount of time Greece has to repay a 110 billion euros (144 billion dollars) bailout that saved the country from default.

Under the terms of the agreement Greece will need to begin repaying loans in 2013. Many economists have expressed doubts as to whether its economy will be able to generate enough economic growth to pay back its debts.

Merkel, together with French President Nicholas Sarkozy, has been pushing for revisions to the EU treaty in order to bring in tough sanctions, including the suspension of voting rights, against members that threaten the euro’s stability by running high government debts.

The two EU heavyweights shocked the bloc in October when they called for changes to the EU’s treaty – usually an arduous political slog – to set up a permanent eurozone bailout facility and allow for the suspension of voting rights for recalcitrant members.

Treaty change is one of the hottest topics in EU politics, not least because the current set of rules, the Lisbon Treaty, came into force just 11 months ago, after 10 years of wrangling. Few leaders welcomed the idea of reopening the debate.
Politicians have come to view referenda on EU initiatives as an all-but-certain way of killing them, after referendum defeats in France, the Netherlands and Ireland since 2005.

(greekreporter.gr)
 
PM reaches out for consensus


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As more strikes loom, Papandreou invites political leaders to visit him for talks about reforms


Prime Minister George Papandreou yesterday called on opposition party leaders to meet him next Tuesday for talks aimed at establishing consensus as his beleaguered government tries to push through more unpopular reforms.

The premier made his appeal in Parliament ahead of what is certain to be a difficult week, with several days of planned strike action and a European Union summit scheduled for Thursday and Friday at which EU leaders are to discuss the creation of a permanent support mechanism for debt-ridden member states. Most of the strikes planned for next week are by workers protesting draft laws affecting labor rights and pay at public enterprises – bills due to be voted through Parliament on Tuesday.

Papandreou stressed that the bills were a crucial part of his government’s reform effort but that he was willing to discuss aspects of it with opposition leaders. “I am ready for cooperation,” Papandreou said. “We are open to constructive proposals,” he added. Earlier in the week, the premier had talks with the visiting managing director of the International Monetary Fund, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who called on opposition parties to set aside their differences and support difficult reforms aimed at saving the Greek economy.

Opposition leaders appeared far from amenable yesterday. During a session of the main conservative opposition New Democracy party, its leader Antonis Samaras accused the government of imposing harsh decisions on its people. “Without dialogue or consensus, without any serious planning and despite serious party infighting, the government is pushing through legislation that radically changes the terms by which millions of Greeks live,” Samaras said. Giorgos Karatzaferis, the head of the far-right Popular Orthodox Struggle (LAOS), struck a similar tone. “You did not approach us for dialogue. You just presented us with a piece of harsh legislation,” Karatzaferis said, referring to the labor rights bill.

Alexis Tsipras, head of the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA), accused Papandreou of “transforming MPs into stooges.” The leader of the Communist Party (KKE), Aleka Papariga, called Papandreou’s administration “the most dangerous government since the restoration of democracy,” and accused it of “creating medieval working conditions.”


(Kathimerini.gr)
 
Snag hit in labor contract reforms



One of the most contentious pieces of legislation that the government will have to pass as part of the package of structural reforms ordered by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund was tabled in Parliament yesterday, but there are concerns among Greece’s lenders that the draft law allowing businesses to bypass collective labor contracts is not totally compatible with the bailout memorandum.

Under the legislation, businesses would be allowed to set aside the collective contracts that exist in a variety of sectors if they run into financial problems and offer their employees in-house deals instead.

Employers would be allowed to pay lower rates than those stipulated in the collective labor deals, although monthly salaries could not dip below the national minimum wage of 740 euros.

The draft law also makes it easier and cheaper to fire employees as collective contracts contain strict clauses on how many workers employers can sack and what compensation they must pay them.

“Our priority is to maintain jobs so... we can return to growth having lost as few jobs as possible,” insisted Prime Minister George Papandreou during a debate about the package of reforms submitted to Parliament.

Sources said the European Commission has expressed concern about some of the provisions in the labor reform, which was drawn up by Labor Minister Louka Katseli, who has publicly expressed skepticism about its contents.

It appears that the way the bill has been worded allows collective contracts to apply to businesses that have not previously taken part in the annual negotiation of the labor deals as long as those firms have not sought to draw up in-house agreements with their employees. Brussels says this is not in keeping with the EU-IMF memorandum that Greece signed but sources said it is unlikely to ask the government to change the bill at this point.
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(Kathimerini.gr)

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Sempre sulla "riforma" del mercato del lavoro.
 
Reforms reinforce agency’s firepower


STELIOS BOURAS


Greece’s recently approved structural reforms are expected to help government representatives draw investor interest from abroad as they pack their bags for several trips in a bid to flag the upcoming changes.

Invest in Greece, a state agency in charge of drawing foreign investment, is heading to Tel Aviv and Paris next week, in order to inform investors of changes reducing delays and costs for businesses operating in the country.

“The biggest problem is Greece’s negative image,” Christos Alexakis, CEO of Invest in Greece, told Kathimerini English Edition on the sidelines of a conference on Thursday.

The Israel investment forum is scheduled for Tuesday with the France trip arranged for Friday, along with the French-Hellenic Chamber of Commerce. Last year, 800 million euros flowed into Greece from France, making the country the second-largest investor after Germany.

However, interest from French firms eyeing Greece has so far has been “moderate,” admitted a source involved in the Paris trip.
“Investors are waiting for the fast-track law. This will help in freeing up investments,” said Alexakis.

The fast-track law, which was recently passed by Parliament, aims to help push through investments worth more than 250 million euros that have been caught up in the country’s notoriously bad bureaucracy.

State Minister Haris Paboukis has been cited as saying that the fast-track law will free up 2.5 billion euros of investments in the first year alone.

Other reforms that may provide Greece with some firepower in drawing investors are changes approved by the Cabinet on Thursday, including a new investment law that provides tax breaks for up to eight years for new companies and subsidies of up to 50 percent on new investments, depending on the location and nature of the project.

Paboukis, a lawyer who has been given the task of making Greece more business-friendly, said a second fast-track law will be prepared in January, tidying up areas not properly addressed the first time around.

“Life doesn’t change with the laws. Laws depend on how they are implemented,” he said on Thursday.


(Kathimerini.gr)


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Ora l'impegno massimo andrà ricercato per attirare gli investitori esteri.

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OTOE has called...



The Greek Federation of Bank Employee Unions (OTOE) has called a 48-hour strike for Tuesday and Wednesday to protest a shake-up of labor laws approved by the government earlier this week. OTOE will gather in Syntagma Square on Tuesday at 1 p.m. for a demonstration, it said. On Wednesday, a general strike will be held by all unions in a move expected to bring the country to a standstill.


(Kathimerini.gr)


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Anche i bancari piangono ...
 
In allegato una tabella panoramica riassuntiva di vari paesi con la Grecia in fondo alla classifica, ovviamente.
 

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Greece Proposes Tax Breaks, Subsidies to Spur Private Investment

By Marcus Bensasson - Dec 10, 2010
Greece introduced legislation to strengthen private investment, including tax breaks, as part of measures agreed with the European Central Bank, European Commission and International Monetary Fund.
The proposals, which Economy and Competitiveness Minister Michalis Chrisochoides presented to a meeting of Greece’s Cabinet yesterday, include tax relief on new businesses for eight years and on investment by existing companies for six years, according to an e-mailed statement from the ministry today.
The government will also subsidise as much as 50 percent of the cost of some investments under the plans, which require the approval of parliament.
Greece agreed to take steps to help investment as part of the conditions for a 110 billion-euro ($146 billion) bailout led by the European Union in May.
Greece has been in recession for two years, with the economy shrinking 1.3 percent in the third quarter, figures published yesterday showed. The government expects gross domestic product to stop contracting in the second half of 2011 and return to growth in 2012.
The Cabinet also approved changes to labor contracts and wage cuts at state enterprises.
 
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