In Brussels , eurozone finance ministers are reviewing Greece 's
progress on implementing lender-ordered austerity measures. In Athens , center-left Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras is exhibiting ostentatious self-confidence.
Deutsche
Welle
From the
Greek government's point of view, everything is going according to plan - maybe
better. Early Sunday, the parliament in Athens
passed an austerity budget for 2016 , enshrining tax hikes and spending cuts
worth billions. The forecast for Greece to return to growth after
mid-2016 are good, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said during the budget debate.
And Greece 's
major banks were even recapitalized with fewer government subsidies than
initially planned.
Sunday's
bad news appeared in the German weekly Welt am Sonntag, which reported that Greece was
trailing far behind on enacting the austerity demanded by its international
creditors, calling the country a ship with no captain. That provoked an
unusually harsh response from the prime minister's press office: The
"diehard and unrepentant enemies of Greece " continue to rely on
"disinformation and speculation."