4 FEB 2, 2016 2:00 AM EST
By Editorial Board
Bloomberg
The Greek
economy is still in intensive care, and the unemployment rate is stubbornly
high, but the situation is improving. The economy is expected to shrink by only
0.7 percent this year, and 2017 could see growth of 1.9 percent. The nation’s
credit rating has been upgraded.
But the
domestic political situation remains fragile. After defections, the
parliamentary majority of Tsipras’s Syriza Party has all but vanished. Avoiding
a rerun of the earlier drama requires a double success -- not just steady
commitment on Greece ’s
side but also greater flexibility from its European partners. And the real test
will come when Tsipras tries to get parliament to approve much-needed reforms
of the pension system.
If this
isn’t cautiously handled, a new political crisis is not just possible but
probable. Keeping pressure on Greece
to persist with needed reforms is vital, and pension reform and privatizations
are undoubtedly necessary. But the EU can improve the chances of success by
being a little more willing to bend than before.
On
privatization, for instance, the sale of airports, ports and other assets
agreed so far will deliver proceeds of about 1.5 billion euros this year; a
reluctance to indulge in what the government still calls “fire sales” may mean
the official budget target is missed. For sure, creditors should demand
progress, and good-faith efforts to keep the earlier promises. But the
direction and durability of reform matter more than the pace. Insisting on
change that’s faster than the government can deliver, or on sales that grossly
undervalue the assets in question, serves no purpose.
On pension
reform, Greece
and its creditors disagree on where to find savings. Should it be mainly from
higher contributions (taxes), as the government prefers, or mainly from lower payments
to pensioners, as the creditors would like?
It is true
that Greece ’s
record on tax collection does not inspire confidence. That said, as long as the
system is pushed toward fiscal soundness, the creditors ought to defer. It
should be for Greece
to say how the cost will be divided between its taxpayers and pensioners.
Finally,
the creditors have agreed to talk about new debt relief -- eventually.
Everybody knows that Greece ’s
finances can’t be repaired without debt relief, so this discussion is overdue.
The details of forgiveness or other concessions needn’t be decided now, but the
talks ought to start. That would give Greek voters more reason to endure the
next stage of belt-tightening.
The
European Union, at great and unreasonable cost, forced Tsipras to surrender
last year. If it doesn’t want a repeat of that calamitous episode, it should be
gracious in victory.
To contact
the senior editor responsible for Bloomberg View’s editorials: David Shipley at
davidshipley@bloomberg.net.
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