Sat Jan 2,
2016 6:01pm GMT
Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras' ruling coalition, which has a majority of just three
seats in parliament, faces tough pension reforms that will test his resolve to
carry out measures demanded by international creditors.
Reforming
the country's ailing pension system is a prerequisite for the first review of Greece 's 86
billion euro (63 billion pound) bailout agreed in July last year.
"The
successful completion of the programme's first review is certain to have a very
positive impact on confidence. It is the key for the return of deposits to the
banking system," Bank of Greece
Governor Yannis Stournaras wrote in an article in Sunday's edition of
Kathimerini newspaper.
"A
potential failure in completing the review would be destabilising, bringing to
memory the experience of the first half of 2015. A repeat of that experience
entails large risks, difficult for the economy to withstand this time."
Tortuous
talks with the country's euro zone partners and the International Monetary Fund
last year as Athens
sought unsuccessfully to undo austerity measures led to a three-week shutdown
of banks and the imposition of capital controls.
Stournaras
wrote that Greece 's
fiscal adjustment since 2010 when its debt crisis exploded is three-quarters of
the way towards the ultimate goal of a primary budget surplus of 3.5 percent of
economic output by 2018.
"NORMALITY
IS NEAR"
A
successful first review would open the way for talks to lighten Greece 's debt burden,
the gradual lifting of capital controls and the acceptance by the European
Central Bank (ECB) of Greek government paper as collateral for bank financing.
The
review's completion would also allow the ECB to include Greek government bonds
in its quantitative easing programme, the central banker wrote.
"The
exit from the crisis and a return to normality is near. The government must
fulfil the contract it negotiated with its lenders and take initiatives to
improve a climate of trust," Stournaras wrote.
Failure to
complete the review, however, would undermine trust, intensify the recession
and lead to more bad loans on bank balance sheets, he said.
In an
interview with Sunday's Realnews newspaper, Tsipras said the country's pension
system was on the verge of collapse and that his government was working to fix
it.
"Our
lenders must know that we will stick to the letter of the (bailout) deal,
without this meaning that we will yield to irrational or unjust demands,"
Tsipras said.
Tsipras
said he was confident that more than his coalition's 153 deputies in the
300-seat parliament would support the pension reform legislation and that his
government aimed to conclude the first bailout review before the end of
February.
(Editing by
David Evans and David Clarke)
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