ECONOMY | 06.05.2010
Greek parliament passes austerity package
The Greek parliament in Athens on Thursday voted in favor of an unprecedented austerity package to fight the country's crippling national debt. The bill passed with 172 out of 296 votes. 121 members of parliament voted against the measures, three abstained.
"The situation today is simple - either we vote and implement the deal or we condemn the country to bankruptcy," Prime Minister George Papandreou told parliament during the debate.
The strict new measures are expected to save the government 30 billion euros ($38.3 million). They include a further reduction in public sector pay and pensions, a 2-percent rise in value added tax to 23 percent and a 10 percent hike in fuel and alcohol taxes.
"The future of Greece is at stake. The economy, democracy and social cohesion are being put to the test," Papandreou said.
Papandreou told parliament that Greece had no choice
Protests against the sharp spending cuts and tax hikes have lead to national strikes and unrest across the country.
On Thursday thousands of demonstrators gathered in the center of Athens to protest against the vote in parliament. Three people died in Athens on Wednesday after rioting demonstrators set fire to a bank.
But Papandreou told parliament "neither rocks nor violence will get Greece out of the guardianship" of the EU or the International Monetary fund - both of which have demanded the tough budget cuts as a precondition for a bailout.
Berlin to be biggest eurozone donor
The combined international effort by eurozone members and the IMF amounts to a 110-billion-euro rescue package.
Greece needs its first cash infusion by May 19 when Athens faces a deadline on a debt it says it cannot repay with new funds.
Germany will be the biggest of the eurozone contributors with a proposed 22.4 billion euros. However, on Thursday Chancellor Angela Merkel failed to persuade opposition parties to vote in favor of the German share for the bailout. Berlin is hoping to pass the legislation required for the bailout by the end of the week.
European leaders are to further coordinate their aid package for Athens at a Brussels summit scheduled for Friday. The EU hopes the three year rescue package for Athens will calm markets and give the Greek government breathing space to overhaul its indebted economy.
After winning over parliament, the government still needs to convince the Greek people that there's no option but to implement the widely unpopular austerity measures
Greek default "out of the question"
Concerns that the Greek fire might spread to other eurozone members such as Portugal, Spain, and Italy were strongly dismissed on Thursday by ECB President Jean Claude Trichet.
At a meeting of the European Central Bank in Lisbon, he insisted that Athens and Lisbon were not in the same fiscal situation.
Trichet also said that a Greek default was "out of the question."
For the eurozone, Trichet predicted moderate but uneven growth amid "high uncertainty" for 2010.
However, the euro has already suffered significantly as a consequence of the crisis. On Thursday, the single currency was down again, trading at a 14-month low of $1.27.
ai/dpa/AFP
Editor: Rob Turner
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