Published : Nov. 1, 2012 - 20:07
ATHENS (AFP) ― Greece unveiled a tough new austerity budget on Wednesday, sparking a call for a 48-hour general strike, as the EU said there was still work to be done before the recession-hit country can access loan funds needed to stave off bankruptcy.
Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras unveiled the 2013 budget, which also predicts that the economy would shrink by a worse than previously expected 4.5 percent next year and the country’s debt mountain will swell to 346 billion euros ($450 billion) or 189 percent of economic output.
Adding to the government’s woes, the main Greek union called for a 48-hour general strike starting on Nov. 6 ― just 10 days before the country risks sliding into bankruptcy if it fails to secure a 31.2 billion euro lifeline from the “troika” of international creditors.
Greece’s Prime Minister Antonis Samaras (right) speaks with Greece’s Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras during a vote on a privatization bill at the Greek parliament in Athens on Wednesday. (AP-Yonhap News)
Conservative Prime Minister Antonis Samaras had announced on Tuesday that his government had agreed with the mission of “troika” auditors in Greece on the terms of a new 13.5 billion euro austerity package needed to unlock the next instalment of rescue loans.
Accordingly, the finance ministry on Wednesday introduced a budget and a three-year economic programme pledging the required level of cuts in 2013-14.
But ahead of a conference call among eurozone finance ministers, who are due to make a final decision on the payout by Nov. 12, the European Commission on Wednesday noted that a deal with Greece was technically still pending.
“We are continuously narrowing the number of open issues,” Simon O’Connor, spokesman for the EU’s euro commissioner Olli Rehn.
O’Connor said Brussels was “confident” of striking an accord “soon.”
The Eurogroup of finance ministers also demanded that Greece “swiftly” solve outstanding issues to clear the way for the loan payment.
“We called on the Greek authorities to solve remaining issues so as to swiftly finalise the negotiations,” said Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker in a statement after a two-hour conference call.
Juncker did not elaborate on the issues that remain, but the Greek government plans to introduce further reform bills in parliament next week.
For his part, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said considerable progress had been made in the talks with Greece “but there is still a lot of work to do. Time is tight,” he told journalists following the conference call.
He dismissed reports the talks with Greece are close to wrapping up.
Samaras’s announcement on the bailout talks angered his socialist and moderate leftist allies in the coalition, who insist the deal on a new round of painful spending cuts and other reforms is not done until it is approved by parliament.
The 2013 budget gives a grim picture of the outlook for the country.
It predicted that gross domestic product in Greece ― already in its fifth year of recession ― would shrink by 4.5 percent compared with a forecast of 3.8 percent a month ago, although below the 6.6 percent decline expected for this year.
The 2013 public deficit forecast was raised to 5.2 percent from the previous prediction of 4.2 percent.
The government is planning 9.4 billion euros ($12.2 billion) in cuts which will affect mainly state wages, pensions and benefits that have already been drastically reduced over the past two years.
But it will still need to borrow over 68 billion euros next year, the draft budget said.
Unions seek rejection of reforms, P.M. warns of ‘chaos’
Greece desperately needs to reach a deal before Nov. 16 as a three-month treasury bill worth five billion euros must be repaid that week.
The government hopes to secure the eurozone’s approval of the cuts by Nov. 12 to unlock the next instalment of EU-IMF rescue loans.
“If the deal does not pass ... the country will be led to chaos,” Samaras warned on Tuesday.
But the unions threatened more social unrest, announcing the two-day general strike to coincide with debates next week on the budget and other reform measures.
“The central aim and demand of the unions is the rejection (by parliament) of unacceptable, destructive and coercive measures imposed by the troika,” the GSEE union said in a statement.
On Wednesday protesters travelled from northern Greece to dump piles of ice in front of the parliament to show their anger against rising taxes on heating fuel.
The draft budget was submitted to parliament just before MPs passed a law that facilitates the sale of state companies, with the government planning to raise 2.5 billion euros in asset sales in 2013.
Under the law, the Greek state is no longer obliged to maintain a specific minimum stake in several public utilities that will be divested in coming months.
These include main electricity provider PPC, leading refiner HELPE, gaming monopoly OPAP, the water companies and port authorities of Athens and Thessaloniki, Hellenic Post and racetrack operator ODIE.
Greece was originally supposed to raise 50 billion euros from asset sales by 2015.
This was later scaled down to 19 billion, and on Wednesday the government said it planned to raise just 9.5 billion euros by 2016.
Wednesday’s privatisation vote was seen as a curtain-raiser for a bigger showdown next week on the budget and remaining reforms.
Greek media meanwhile were on strike on Wednesday over social security measures affecting journalists.
People walk past the Greek parliament in Athens on Tuesday. Greece unveiled a tough new austerity budget on Wednesday, sparking a call for a 48-hour general strike, as the EU said there was still work to be done before the recession-hit country can access loan funds needed to stave off bankruptcy.
People walk by slogans on the Athens Academy in the city center on Tuesday. Greece unveiled a tough new austerity budget on Wednesday, sparking a call for a 48-hour general strike, as the EU said there was still work to be done before the recession-hit country can access loan funds needed to stave off bankruptcy.
EU commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Olli Rehn is pictured at the EU headquarters in Brussels in September 2012. The European Commission denied on Wednesday that a deal had been reached between international creditors and the Greek government on its debt bailout programme but expressed confidence agreement would be reached.