(Reuters) -
U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew urged Greece
on Sunday to persevere with tough economic reforms during a one-day trip to Athens designed to demonstrate Washington 's support for the crisis-plagued
country.
"Ό,τι η ψυχή επιθυμεί, αυτό και πιστεύει." Δημοσθένης (Whatever the soul wishes, thats what it believes, Demosthenes)
Monday, July 22, 2013
U.S. Treasury Secretary Lew urges Greece to stick with reforms
Detroit, the New Greece
The New
York Times
July 21,
2013
By PAUL
KRUGMAN
…, the truth was that Greece was a very special case,
holding few if any lessons for wider economic policy…
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Greek PM unveils tax cut ahead of vote on job losses
By Karolina
Tagaris
(Reuters) -
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras announced Greece 's first major tax cut since
its crisis began nearly four years ago, highlighting a hard-won concession just
hours before lawmakers vote on a bill to eliminate thousands of public sector
jobs.
U.S.'s Lew to visit Greece, discuss its reforms
(Reuters) -
U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew will visit Greece
on Sunday to discuss the euro zone country's economic reforms and Europe 's policies to support recovery, the Treasury said
on Wednesday.
Lew will
visit Athens after attending the Group of 20
gathering of finance ministers and central bankers in Moscow this weekend. Greece 's debt
crisis has roiled the euro zone and raised doubts about the currency bloc's
future.
The Surprising Relationship Between Corruption and Economic Growth
Posted By
Park MacDougald Tuesday, July 16, 2013
- 7:45 PM
Foreign
Policy
Another
day, another ballooning corruption scandal in southern Europe .
On Monday, the former treasurer of Spain's ruling center-right Popular Party
(PP), Luis Bárcenas, admitted in court to authoring handwritten ledgers
detailing the secret flow of cash from private firms to top-level officials in
the PP. Bárcenas also alleged, after months of speculation in the media, that
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy accepted regular payments from the illegal
slush fund.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Greece privatisation: Myth or reality?
BBC
15 July
2013 Last updated at 23:17 GMT
By Nigel
Cassidy
Business
correspondent, BBC News, Athens
Visit any
one of the Greek state's Opap betting shops and it's pretty hard to fathom
quite what is going on.
Groups of
mainly men who can probably ill afford the price of a lottery ticket sit around
staring at electronic screens showing grids of random figures, all hoping
against hope that their numbers will come up.
It's a fine
metaphor for Greece 's
wider - and so far wildly unsuccessful - drive to raise billions of euros to
help offset the country's punishing debt repayments.
Parliament Votes to Indict Ex-Official in Greece
July 15,
2013
By NIKI
KITSANTONIS
ATHENS —
Greek lawmakers voted early Tuesday in favor of indicting former Finance
Minister George Papaconstantinou over the way he handled a list of more than
2,000 Greeks with Swiss bank accounts, a possible source of much-needed tax
revenue that was never exploited by the authorities.
In a secret
ballot that followed a contentious debate, a majority of lawmakers in Greece ’s
300-seat Parliament said that Mr. Papaconstantinou should stand trial on three
charges: breach of trust, tampering with an official document and breach of
duty.
Labels:
Austerity measures,
Corruption,
Greek Crisis,
Politics,
Tax Evasion
Monday, July 15, 2013
UPDATE 2-Greece picks Eurobank to buy Postbank ahead of mid-July deadline
Sat Jul 13, 2013 7:29pm EDT
By George Georgiopoulos
(Reuters) - Greece 's
bank rescue fund picked Eurobank to buy New Hellenic Postbank as part of
consolidation in the sector and to meet a condition for the next tranche of Greece 's
bailout, it said after a board meeting on Saturday.
Friday, July 12, 2013
Wrong Prescription for Greece
The New
York Times
July 9,
2013
By THE
EDITORIAL BOARD
Labels:
Austerity measures,
Greek Crisis,
Troika,
Unemployment
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
EU Agrees to Keep Aid Flowing to Greece
By MATINA
STEVIS, MATTHEW DALTON and FRANCES ROBINSON CONNECT
The Wall Street Journal
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Euro zone grants multi-billion euro lifeline for Greece
By Annika
Breidthardt and Martin Santa
(Reuters) -
Greece
secured a lifeline from the euro zone and the IMF on Monday but was told it
must keep its promises on cutting public sector jobs and selling state assets
to get all the cash.
The 6.8
billion euro ($8.7 billion) deal, which spares Greece defaulting on debt in
August, will see Athens drip fed support under close watch from the euro zone
and the International Monetary Fund to ensure implementation of unpopular
reforms.
Monday, July 8, 2013
Greece, Troika Optimistic on Reaching Deal Before Meeting
By Paul
Tugwell & Tom Stoukas - Jul 8, 2013 1:01 AM GMT+0300
Greek
Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said the government probably will reach a
deal with international creditors before today’s Eurogroup meeting to keep
bailout funds flowing to the country.
“I’m
optimistic that we will close a deal,” Stournaras said yesterday in Athens after a seventh day
of talks with representatives of the so-called troika of the International
Monetary Fund, European Central Bank and European Commission.
Greece, foreign lenders close in on deal to unlock aid
By Lefteris
Papadimas and Ingrid Melander
ATHENS/AIX-EN-PROVENCE,
France
| Sun Jul 7, 2013 4:41pm EDT
(Reuters) -
Greece
is likely to reach a deal with foreign lenders on its latest bailout review
before a meeting of euro zone finance ministers on Monday to decide on further
aid, EU and Greek officials said on Sunday.
Labels:
Austerity measures,
Greek Crisis,
Mobility Scheme,
Troika
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Bond Funds Losing $60 Billion Foreshadow Risk of Fed Exit
By Margaret
Collins & Charles Stein - Jul 4, 2013 7:00 AM GMT+0300
Investors
have pulled about $60 billion from U.S. bond funds since Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke rattled markets by outlining his plan to end
the central bank’s unprecedented asset purchases.
The
redemptions foreshadow what’s in store for asset managers when the central bank
eventually scales back the $85 billion in monthly purchases of bonds and
mortgage securities that investors have come to rely on. Bond funds had $28.1
billion in net redemptions in the week ended June 26, the Washington-based
Investment Company Institute said yesterday.
China to grow 7.6 percent in second half; risks up: paper
SHANGHAI |
Thu Jul 4, 2013 12:22am EDT
(Reuters) -
China 's
economy is expected to grow 7.6 percent in the second half of 2013, but risks of bad local government loans, slowing
growth of central government revenue, diminished export competitiveness and
industrial capacity are growing, the official China Securities Journal reported
on Thursday.
Economists
have been cutting their forecasts for the world's second-largest economy
following a string of weak data recently, with some predicting the government
will not be able to meet it full-year target of 7.5 percent. China 's economy
expanded 7.8 percent last year, the slowest pace in 13 years.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Exclusive: Greece has three days to deliver or face consequences - EU officials
BRUSSELS/ATHENS
| Tue Jul 2, 2013 6:04am EDT
(Reuters) -
Greece has three days to
reassure Europe and the International Monetary
Fund it can deliver on conditions attached to its international bailout in
order to receive the next tranche of aid, four euro zone officials said on
Tuesday.
The lenders
are unhappy with progress Greece
has made towards reforming its public sector, a senior euro zone official
involved in the negotiations said, while another said they might suspend an
inspection visit they resumed on Monday.
Monday, July 1, 2013
Stakes raised as Greece, lenders resume talks on bailout loan
By Harry
Papachristou
(Reuters) -
Greece
and its international lenders resume talks on Monday to unlock 8.1 billion
euros ($10.5 billion) of rescue loans after a two-week break during which the
government almost collapsed over redundancies at state broadcaster ERT.
Prime
Minister Antonis Samaras has said he expects the talks to conclude
successfully, despite setbacks to the country's privatization program and delays
in public sector reforms.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Greek gambling privatization of OPAP threatens to unravel
Thu Jun 27,
2013 2:52pm EDT
*
Privatization of gambling company OPAP has stalled
* Opposing
business groups haggle over sale terms
* Failure
to complete deal would derail asset sale plan
ATHENS, June
27 (Reuters) - Conflicting interests between opposing business groups threaten
to unravel the sale of Greek gambling company OPAP, the head of the country's
privatization agency said on Thursday, risking delivery of a fatal blow to the
country's asset sale program under its international bailout.
UPDATE 3-TAP to carry Azeri gas via Greece as Austria loses out
Wed Jun 26,
2013 11:49am EDT
* BP,
Statoil lead development of Shah Deniz II gas field
* Plans
call for flows to Europe from 2019
* Nabucco
West pipeline not chosen, OMV says
* Official
announcement awarding project to TAP expected Friday
* TAP
project will cross Greece , Albania
By Georgina Prodhan and Karolin Schaps
VIENNA/LONDON,
June 26 (Reuters) - The group developing Azerbaijan's vast gas reserves has
chosen the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) via Greece to link to Europe,
officials said on Wednesday, defeating the Nabucco West consortium which had
backed a route to Austria.
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Analysis : Bruised Greek government to limp along, toughen stance with lenders
By Harry
Papachristou
(Reuters) -
Greece 's
weakened coalition government is expected to survive the departure of a junior
partner for now but will be forced to resist any fresh demands from its foreign
lenders to prevent its tiny parliamentary majority from crumbling.
A year
after coming to power, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras suffered a heavy blow
when his smallest coalition partner, the Democratic Left, quit the government
last week to protest the abrupt closure of state broadcaster ERT.
Labels:
Austerity measures,
Coalition Government,
Greece,
Greek Crisis
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