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."
Not all
Greeks were so defensive about the criticism from Germany . "The report, after
all, hits the nail on the head," the political scientist Levteris
Koussoulis said. "The country is indeed without leadership - in the sense
that those in power are unwilling or incapable of coming up with concrete
results, sticking to an obsolete attitude instead, and working first and
foremost towards staying in power." On a "metaphorical level,"
it was also correct to suggest that no one was steering the boat, "because
the leading crew is primarily interested in remaining on board, not really
caring about where the ship is heading."
In Athens , however, many
were less critical of the government. "Pressure and blackmail - the
lenders know the game," read an editorial in the left-liberal EFSYN daily,
which called the Welt report "Germany 's Trojan Horse."
In a radio
interview broadcast on Monday, Deputy Foreign Minister Dimitris Mardas said,
"I don't even know what's behind it."
New
austerity measures
Further
reforms could happen between now and Friday - including a controversial civil
service wage cut and the politically undesirable privatization of a state-owned
energy supplier. This could get Greece
another billion in loans. In addition, officials expect to release a proposal
for reworking the pension system by the end of January. Loans to Greece
loans have recently been disbursed in increasingly smaller installments, and
only in return for concrete and verifiable progress on austerity.
Prior to
passing the most recent austerity package in November, lenders had already put
pressure on Athens
to solve open questions - successfully, it appeared. Political scientist
Koussoulis said lenders were once again increasing the pressure, and Prime
Minister Tsipras is looking for wiggle room. Indeed, the government has been
forced to implement austerity in bits and pieces, he said, because at this
point it cannot afford a new internal standoff or external rift with the
eurozone.
"The
government says openly that it does not agree with many reforms, thereby
signaling that they won't be implemented," Koussoulis said. "I
believe they're playing for time in order to assume control of state
institutions. When the odds turn favorable, it will probably not shy away from
a new confrontation - and even renounce a tranche of aid already agreed
upon."
The Greek
politicial analyst Tassos Pappas said the government would stand up to
creditors if they insisted on cuts to minimum incomes in the pension revamp.
"With respect to this issue, the lenders not only want to dictate the
saving objective, but also the means which are necessary to reach that
objective," he said. "For example, they reject an increase in
employers' social contributions that has been proposed by the government."
To be able
to introduce the remaining austerity measures, Tsipras had asked for a
nonpartisan consensus for his economic course during the budget debate.
Immediately, he received a number of rejections - after all, lawmakers argues,
he had sabotaged a consensus at every opportunity when he was still opposition
leader. In response to that reproach, Tsipras changed gears to
"attack," which was primarily directed at the largest opposition
party, the right-wing New Democracy: ND would be well-advised to get used to
four strenuous years in the opposition, Tsipras said.
The prime
minister's advice does not seem far-fetched. The once-powerful ND is in a
rather deplorable state at the moment. After the election of a new party
chairman was canceled at the end of November because of a computer glitch, interim
leader Evangelos Meimarakis stepped down, only to have his political ally
Yiannis Plakiotakis installed as successor. Currently, Meimarakis is eagerly
working on his comeback - which at least three other ND party heavyweights are
trying to prevent.
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