The Washington Post
By
Associated Press, Published: October 1
This year’s
recession will see the economy shrink around 6.5 percent, the document
estimated. Unemployment is predicted to rise to 24.7 percent in 2013 from an average
23.5 percent in 2012.
The budget
sees Greece ’s
government still running at a loss despite waves of spending cuts and tax hikes
over the past two years, as it has struggled to meet the terms for rescue loans
from other eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund.
The deficit
for 2012 is expected to stand at 6.6 percent of GDP, improving slightly to 4.2
percent — or €8 billion ($10.3 billion) — next year, the document showed.
Greece
still has a primary deficit — which excludes interest rates paid on existing
debt — of 1.4 percent of GDP this year, disappointing earlier forecasts for a
surplus. That is expected to improve in 2013, when the budget projects a small
primary surplus of 1.1 percent of GDP.
The budget
includes about €7.8 billion worth of austerity measures for next year. They are
part of a €13.5 billion package of spending cuts and tax hikes for 2013 and
2014 that Greece ’s
international creditors have demanded in exchange for continued payout of the
rescue loans that are protecting the country from a messy default.
Of the €7.8
billion in measures for next year, €3.8 billion are to come from pension cuts
and €1.1 billion from salary cuts. Other cutbacks include trimming costs for
healthcare, education and defense.
Finance
Minister Yannis Stournaras submitted the draft budget to Parliament after talks
with debt inspection teams from the IMF, European Central Bank and European
Commission — known as the troika.
Negotiations
with the troika continue on the details of the two-year austerity package,
meaning some of the details in the draft budget could be amended. Parliament
usually votes on the budget in December.
As
Stournaras met with the troika, a group of about 30 protesters, mainly from the
small right-wing Independent Greeks party, gathered outside the finance
ministry. “Bastards, the gallows are coming,” they chanted.
Austerity
talks involving the troika and three political parties backing Greece ’s
four-month-old coalition government have dragged on for weeks, with
disagreement over how the cuts will affect low-income Greeks suffering under
recession.
Conservative
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, in a weekend newspaper interview, argued the
country was showing its rescue lenders that it is serious about its reforms.
“Our
partners can see that changes are now happening,” Samaras told the Sunday To
Vima newspaper. “The first thing we must do is win back our damaged credibility
... Without credibility, you can’t negotiate.”
____
Nicholas
Paphitis in Athens
contributed.
Copyright
2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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