Titoli di Stato area Euro GRECIA Operativo titoli di stato - Cap. 1

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nutrisci pure molti dubbi e mi sa' che debbano essere piuttosto sul disperato per uscire allo scoperto in maniera cosi' ovvia . Forse qualche problema di budget ?

quando vedo episodi come venerdì a mezzogiorno, permettimi di nutrire quache dubbio in termini di manipolazione del mercato, soprattutto dopo una sequela di annunci di Moody's (nel giro di 7 gg è stata una raffica nei confronti dell'Italia), senza ricordare qualche altro spike famoso
 
UE: SCHAEUBLE, SE ATENE BOCCIA PACCHETTO A RISCHIO L'EUROZONA

12:55 26 GIU 2011

(AGI) - Berlino, 26 giu. - Se il Parlamento greco bocciasse il pacchetto di riforme economiche varato dal premier Giorgio Papandreou, ad essere a rischio sarebbe l'intero sistema finanziario dell'Eurozona.
Lo afferma in un intervista al domenicale 'Bild am Sonntag' (BamS) il ministro tedesco delle Finanze, Wolfgang Schaeuble (Cdu). Una bocciatura del parlamento di Atene "metterebbe a rischio la stabilita' di tutta l'Eurozona", spiega Schaeuble, poiche' a quel punto bisognerebbe "intervenire rapidamente per evitare che il pericolo di contagio si estenda al sistema finanziario ed agli altri Stati con la moneta unica".
Il ministro aggiunge che un fallimento del piano di risparmi della Grecia potrebbe anche avere "gravi conseguenze per i mercati finanziari mondiali", poiche' "anche se i rischi sono difficili da valutare, essi sono elevati a giudizio generale".
"Stiamo facendo di tutto per impedire un accentuarsi della crisi per l'Europa, ma al contempo dobbiamo essere preparati per ogni evenienza. E' questa la nostra responsabilita' ed e' a questo che ci stiamo preparando".
Schaeuble ricorda che la crisi economica del 2008 "ha fatto crollare del 4,7% il Pil tedesco, ma siamo riusciti a dominare la situazione. Nonostante questa esperienza, l'attuale situazione rimane tesa e noi siamo vigili".
 
Critical week for the economy



A critical week opens for the Greek economy on Monday, as the Medium-Term fiscal programme, ratification of which has been set out by the EU as a condition for the smooth financing of Greece, goes before the parliament plenary.

The programme will be put to vote in parliament on Wednesday amidst reactions by the opposition and trade unions, while its Implementation Law will be voted on by the House on Thursday.

Greece's two major umbrella federations GSEE and ADEDY, representing the private and public sectors respectively, have called a nationwide 48-hour strike on Tuesday and Wednesday while the Medium-Term programme will be debated and voted on in the 300-seat parliament, in protest of austerity measures and the Medium-Term programme, as well as planned nationalisations of state utilities and organisations.

(ana.gr)
 
'Measures unjust, but serve pressing national need'



(ANA-MPA)--Greece's new finance minister Evangelos Venizelos acknowledged that the measures contained in the government's Medium-Term fiscal programme and its Implementation Law are tough and in many instances unjust, but added that he took the responsibility of introducing them upon his assumption of the ministry because they were the only way at this time to serve a pressing national need.

In a statement on Saturday evening, Venizelos said: "I am fully aware that the measures contained in the Medium-Term fiscal program and the Implementation Law are heavy and in many aspects unjust. I undertook the responsibility of introducing them, barely having been a week at the Finance Ministry, because only in this way is an urgent national need served at this time."

He said that finalisation of the 28 billion euros Medium-Term programme, of which 5.6 billion euros are still outstanding, "needed to be done in order to close this circle of negotiations and for fulfillment of the conditions for the prompt disbursement of the (12 billion euros) 5th tranche of the 110 billion euro (EU-IMF bailout) loan", adding that "these 12 billion euros of this 5th tranche are absolutely necessary in order to service the cash needs of the public sector, which in reality is servicing of the immediate and vital needs of the citizens".

Venizelos reiterated that the ministry is at the same time planning the next step, which contains three points: First, ensuring the viability of the state debt, "without which the sacrifices of the Greek people will be in vain"; Second, immediate change of taxation policy and the creation of a National Tax System that will remedy injustices and discrepancies and will restore the moral and social balance of the measures; and, third, negotiation for a new support programme that will lead Greece not only back to the markets but also the restoration of its fiscal and economic independence.

(ana.gr)
 
Samaras: Better tomorrow



(ANA-MPA)--Main opposition New Democracy (ND) leader Antonis Samaras on Sunday called for a "different economic policy" that would "not be founded on excessive taxation".

There is a better tomorrow for the country, provided there is a change of policy, said Samaras, who was attending the 31st annual get-together of Sarakatsani in Pertouli.

"There is a better tomorrow. The most difficult thing that I see throughout all of Greece is the dejection, the feeling of depression, something that does not suit the Greeks. That must be overturned, and you give hope only when you have specific, serious elements of a different policy that at the same time acknowledges the huge problem," the ND leader said.

(ana.gr)
 
PASOK MPs wavering over support for fiscal plan



Four deputies indicate that they might not support austerity package in Parliament this week


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As many as four PASOK deputies are considering not voting for the government’s medium-term fiscal plan in Parliament this week, leaving the ruling PASOK party with the slimmest of majorities to pass the new set of austerity measures through the House.
Greece has been told by its European Union partners and the International Monetary Fund that it has to pass the latest round of spending cuts and tax hikes in order to qualify for a July loan instalment of 12 billion euros and to move a step closer toward agreeing a second bailout with its lenders.
Without the July tranche, Greece will go bankrupt. However, the government and its new Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos have yet to convince all 155 Socialist MPs that they should back the midterm fiscal plan when Parliament concludes its debate and vote on Wednesday.
Kozani MP Alekos Athanasiadis insists he will oppose the measures. “Nothing has changed for me,” he told Skai TV on Saturday. “I want to make it clear that I will not vote for the midterm fiscal plan. I do not disagree with the government on a lot of points but I stick to my view that some public enterprises should not be sold.”
On Friday, Thomas Robopoulos, a Thessaloniki lawmaker, also said that he was considering opposing the measures. Robopoulos said he would probably quit Parliament after casting his vote against the PASOK government.
Robopoulos’s Thessaloniki colleague Chryssa Arapoglou has also indicated she is reluctant to approve the package and is considering quitting her post.
On Saturday, PASOK deputy Panayiotis Kouroublis also told Skai TV that he was in emotional turmoil over whether to support the government. “For anyone who is an MP, these are the most torturous days of his life,” he said.
Kouroublis said he sent a note to Venizelos seeking clarification on 15 points and would wait for a response before making a final decision on how he would vote.
If all four MPs oppose the government, PASOK would be left with a one-seat majority unless it received support from another smaller party, such as the centrist Democratic Alliance. Venizelos acknowledged on Saturday that some of the measures are “severe and unfair” but added that “this is the only way at the moment that we can address an urgent national need.”






ekathimerini.com , Sunday June 26, 2011 (23:17)

***
Necessario un "pressing" sui deputati del Pasok.
La maggioranza potrebbe essere appesa ad un voto, con l'inevitabile richiesta di sostegno da parte di deputati di altre formazioni politiche.
 
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Samaras singles out taxation as key obstacle




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New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras on Sunday singled out taxation as his main point of disagreement with the government’s economic policy, insisting that lower taxes are needed to help Greece return to growth and to restore some hope among Greeks.
Samaras and his party have been criticized at home and abroad over the last few days for opposing the government’s medium-term fiscal plan even though the conservatives agree to reductions in public spending and back the sale of state assets.
Germany’s Suddeutsche Zeitung newspaper suggested that the European People’s Party, the grouping of the EU’s center-right parties, is considering either ousting ND or cutting its subsidies.
Samaras appeared unperturbed when he spoke at a gathering in Pertouli, central Greece, yesterday but he took care in specifying exactly what he opposes in the midterm fiscal plan, to be voted in Parliament on Wednesday.
He said that Greeks were “over-taxed” and that the new hikes included in the scheme were “too much of a burden to carry.” “The most difficult thing that I see throughout all of Greece is the dejection, the feeling of depression, something that does not suit the Greeks,” he said
ND’s insistence that it will not support the measures in Parliament this week has caused extra tension between the conservatives and ruling PASOK. ND deputy Theodoros Karaoglou prompted an angry response from his Socialist counterpart Panayiotis Kouroublis when he suggested on Skai radio that the latter and two other PASOK MPs who have indicated they might not support the government this week were “phoney rebels” and would end up voting for the midterm plan.






ekathimerini.com , Sunday June 26, 2011 (23:14)
 
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