Sunday, December 13, 2015

Greece Reaches Deal With Creditors on Next Portion of Financial Aid

Reforms to include overhauls to banking sector, design of a privatization fund, partial privatization of power grid operator

By NEKTARIA STAMOULI
Dec. 11, 2015 3:44 p.m. ET

The Wall Street Journal

ATHENSGreece and its international creditors reached a deal on Friday on a new set of economic overhauls the government must implement to receive the next slice of €1 billion ($1.1 billion) in financial aid.

“We have reached a deal on this round,” Greek Economy Minister George Stathakis told reporters after the latest round of negotiations.

Thursday, December 10, 2015

What China Can Learn From Greece

By SERGEI GURIEVDEC. 9, 2015

The New  York Times

As a political economist, I make my living studying the impact of politics on economics. My friends and co-authors who are political scientists focus on how economics affects politics. Which is more relevant in real life? Do countries with bad politics suffer from poor economic outcomes because bad economic policies are driven by bad politics? Or because persistent economic difficulties make reasonable politics hard to sustain?

Every year offers examples of both kinds. The year 2015 was no exception, producing two very important stories: Greece and China. Both are dramatic and multifaceted.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

EU, creditors put Greece finances under the microscope

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."

Greece Expected to Miss 2016 Privatization Target

The agency has repeatedly missed its targets and been hit by series of resignations since it was formed

The Wall Street Journal

By NEKTARIA STAMOULI
Updated Dec. 8, 2015 12:44 p.m. ET
2 COMMENTS
ATHENSGreece is likely to miss its privatization target next year, the head of Greece’s privatization agency said Tuesday, even as the agency prepares to make progress on nine asset sales in the next twelve months.

Under the terms of a new bailout agreement signed earlier this year, the Hellenic Republic Asset Development Fund aims to raise €3.7 billion ($4 billion) from asset sales in 2016 and another €1.3 billion in 2017.

Monday, December 7, 2015

Turkey says has duty to protect soldiers in Iraq after Baghdad ultimatum

Mon Dec 7, 2015 7:56am EST Related: WORLD, TURKEY, IRAQ
ISTANBUL/ERBIL | BY DAREN BUTLER AND ISABEL COLES

Turkey said on Monday it had a duty to protect its soldiers around the Islamic State-controlled city of Mosul in Iraq and that they were there simply on a training mission, after Baghdad ordered the immediate withdrawal of its latest deployment.

Turkey sent hundreds of forces to a camp in the Bashiqa region of northern Iraq on Thursday. It described it as a routine rotation in an existing training program to help Iraqis retake Mosul from Islamic State, and said the troops were there to ensure the safety of the Turkish military trainers.

The situation in Greece is a lot worse than it looks

 Reuters
Paul Taylor, Reuters

ATHENS (Reuters) - After a tumultuous year of two elections, a referendum, a default, a bank shutdown, capital controls and a tidal wave of migrants, it's amazing that Greece is still standing, like the Parthenon towering over Athens.

Yet the visitor's first impression is not of a country in deep depression in the eighth year of a recession that has shriveled economic output by more than 25 percent and put one in four people out of work.

Shortage of trust threatens Greece's comeback

Sun Dec 6, 2015 4:15am EST Related: WORLD, GREECE
ATHENS | BY PAUL TAYLOR

After a tumultuous year of two elections, a referendum, a default, a bank shutdown, capital controls and a tidal wave of migrants, it's amazing that Greece is still standing, like the Parthenon towering over Athens.

Yet the visitor's first impression is not of a country in deep depression in the eighth year of a recession that has shriveled economic output by more than 25 percent and put one in four people out of work.

For sure, there are more beggars in the streets, public health is declining and many Greeks have stories of hardship in their family. But the bars and restaurants are full, Christmas lights glitter and there is plenty of money being spent in the stores in central Athens.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

In Greece, Shift From Cash to Plastic Could Undercut Shadow Economy

By SUZANNE DALEYDEC. 4, 2015
The New York Times

ATHENS — In the central market here recently, hanging above the trays of cod and the slabs of pink meat, was evidence that Greece’s near bankruptcy last summer was having an unexpected impact — shiny new placards advertising that, at least in some stalls, customers could now pay with debit and credit cards.

“If I like it or not, people are asking for it,” said Christos Papoutsis, 57, a butcher here who finally yielded to plastic money only last month. “If I don’t accept the cards, I will lose sales.”

Friday, December 4, 2015

Το καραβάνι τρέχει μες στη σκόνη

ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 12:44
Του Πάσχου Μανδραβέλη
Εφημερίδα Καθημερινή

Ο συνεργάτης του Μπιλ Κλίντον, και πρώην εκπρόσωπος Τύπου του Λευκού Οίκου, Τζορτζ Στεφανόπουλος έδωσε μια καλή συμβουλή στον διάδοχό του: «Αν όλα πάνε στραβά, ρίξε το φταίξιμο στο Τύπο». Ο ελληνικός λαός θα το έλεγε καλύτερα: «ο πνιγμένος από τα Μέσα πιάνεται». Και η κυβέρνηση πνίγεται στην ανικανότητά της, στις παλινωδίες της, στα γινάτια, στα ρουσφέτια, στην αγραμματοσύνη, στο γενικώς «άλλα λέω κι άλλα κάνω», με αποτέλεσμα τώρα να της φταίνε τα Μέσα Ενημέρωσης. Ετσι, ανάμεσα στα σκυλιά που ουρλιάζουν και στα καραβάνια που τάχα προχωρούν, ο πρωθυπουργός είπε στην κοινοβουλευτική ομάδα του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ για «ένα μιντιακό σύστημα που ξεψυχά και βρυχάται» (1.12.2015).

Greece Agrees to More EU Help With Migrants

EU members were pressuring Greece to better monitor the bloc’s external border
The Wall Street Journal

By VALENTINA POP
Updated Dec. 3, 2015 5:03 p.m. ET
1 COMMENTS
BRUSSELSGreece appeared to succumb to pressure from other governments as it agreed to accept more European Union help to control migrant flows.

Under pressure from EU governments, including a veiled suggestion that it could be suspended from the Schengen passport-free zone, Greece agreed to three steps to better handle incoming migrants, including assistance from the EU Border Agency, the European Commission said.

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Greeks Strike to Protest Latest Austerity Measures

By NIKI KITSANTONIS
DEC. 3, 2015
The New York Times

ATHENS — Workers across Greece walked off their jobs on Thursday, heeding a call by labor unions to join the second general strike in three weeks to protest a new round of austerity measures.

The 24-hour walkout shut down public services, disrupted public transportation, left ferries moored in ports, closed schools and forced hospitals to function with reduced staffs.

Russia and Turkey Hurl Insults as Feud Deepens

By NEIL MacFARQUHAR
DEC. 3, 2015

The New York Times

MOSCOW — The leaders of Turkey and Russia flung insults at each other on Thursday in their deepening feud over the shooting down of a Russian warplane, with President Vladimir V. Putin warning that Moscow would do more than merely ban tomatoes and construction projects to penalize Ankara.

The Kremlin also said that the long-delayed transfer of the S-300 air defense system to Iran had started, a move that strengthens one of Turkey’s regional rivals while raising concerns in Israel.

EU presses Greece over migrants, weighs Schengen threat

Wed Dec 2, 2015 6:37pm EST Related: WORLD, GREECE, MIGRANT CRISIS
ATHENS/BRUSSELS | BY PAUL TAYLOR AND ALASTAIR MACDONALD

Greece hit back on Wednesday at threats from some EU states to suspend it from the Schengen zone of open border travel because of its failure to control large numbers of migrants entering Europe.

Some central European officials, most prominently Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, have suggested excluding Greece from Schengen. Diplomats and European Union officials say some governments have raised the possibility informally but it would be a largely symbolic move, with little impact on migration.

"It is not said officially, but there is pressure," Greek Migration Minister Yannis Mouzalas told reporters, denying a Financial Times report on Wednesday that Athens had, among other things, refused an EU offer of devices designed to share the identity data of incoming migrants around the bloc.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Greece aims for debt relief deal in Feb 2016 after reforms done

Mon Nov 30, 2015 12:11pm EST
ATHENS | BY LEFTERIS PAPADIMAS AND PAUL TAYLOR

Reuters

Greece wants a deal on debt relief with its euro zone creditors in February to remove financial uncertainty and spur economic recovery, its finance minister said, but euro zone officials said that timetable was very ambitious and likely to slip.

Addressing a conference of investors, Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos said on Monday that making the ailing euro zone country's debt sustainable was the key to liberating the economy and restoring confidence among depositors and companies.

Euro to Bear Brunt of Yuan's Inclusion in Reserve-Currency Club

 Netty Idayu Ismail

 Lillian Chen

Bloombgerg


The euro’s worst year in a decade is looking even grimmer after the Chinese yuan’s inclusion in the International Monetary Fund’s basket of reserve currencies.
The 19-nation currency’s weighting in the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights basket will drop to 30.93 percent, from 37.4 percent, the organization said Monday. The yuan will join the dollar, euro, pound and yen in the SDR allocation from Oct. 1, 2016, at a 10.92 percent weighting.
The euro has tumbled 13 percent against the dollar this year, the most in a decade, and central banks have reduced the proportion of the currency in their reserves to the lowest since 2002. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi signaled on Oct. 22 that policy makers are open to boosting stimulus, after embarking on a 1.1 trillion-euro ($1.2 trillion) asset-purchase program in March.

Monday, November 30, 2015

An Expat’s Eye on Greece

By Rena Silverman Nov. 30, 2015
The New York Times

Dimitri Melios believes that people put reality into boxes. Most, he says, have a stereotypical conception of different parts of the world. When they think of India, they think of the Taj Mahal. And when they think of his native Greece, they think of sunny Mediterranean beaches.

“Most people go to Greece from this country or elsewhere,” he said from his home in Manhattan. “They just go to a couple of specific destinations. Everybody goes to Mykonos or Santorini, and that’s the kind of image people associate with the country.”

Friday, November 27, 2015

Greece Faces Two-Week Reform Deadline to Unlock $1.1 Billion Eurozone Aid

A list of 13 so-called milestone reform demands signed off by eurozone officials
The Wall Street Journal

By VIKTORIA DENDRINOU
Nov. 27, 2015 4:27 a.m. ET


BRUSSELS—Greece has two weeks to implement 13 pieces of economic reform, including changes to its banking sector and the design of a privatization fund, to receive €1 billion ($1.1 billion) in financial aid, according to an agreement struck by eurozone finance ministries.

Completing these reforms would allow Athens to receive fresh loans from its international creditors, and bring Athens one step closer to starting negotiations on debt relief.

Memo to Putin: Syria Is Turkey's Ukraine

49 NOV 27, 2015 2:00 AM EST
By Marc Champion
Bloomberg
Russian leaders have evidently been shocked by Turkey's deliberate decision to shoot down one of their planes, which they say was motivated by Turkey's alleged support for Islamic State and greed for the proceeds of smuggled terrorist oil. A simpler explanation is that Russia would have done the same.

Here is the hypothetical: What would President Vladimir Putin do if civil war broke out in a neighboring country, which had been part of the Russian empire for centuries before breaking away under circumstances, and with borders, that Russians still found difficult to accept? What would he do if, in that war, some of the rebels were ethnic Russians at risk of being brutally crushed by the armed forces of the neighboring state?

Actually, that's not so hypothetical; it pretty much describes eastern Ukraine. And we know what Russia did -- it became heavily involved in a poorly concealed invasion.

Russia to Target Syria Jihadists as Hollande Seeks Diplomacy

 Andrey Biryukov  Helene Fouquet  Henry Meyer
November 26, 2015 — 10:48 PM EET Updated on November 27, 2015 — 9:02 AM EET

Bloomberg

France and Russia agreed to coordinate strikes in Syria to increase the focus on jihadist militants, as French President Francois Hollande seeks to rally support against Islamic State before hosting world leaders in Paris next week.

China Unveils Biggest Army Overhaul in Decades to Project Power


By  Bloomberg News
November 26, 2015 — 12:56 PM EET Updated on November 27, 2015 — 3:40 AM EET

President Xi Jinping announced a major overhaul of China’s military to make the world’s largest army more combat ready and better equipped to project force beyond the country’s borders.
Under the reorganization, all branches of the armed forces would come under a joint military command, Xi told a meeting of military officials in Beijing Thursday, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. Bloomberg in September reported details of the plan, which may also seek to consolidate the country’s seven military regions to as few as four.