EU finance chief Olli Rehn says Greece must make additional spending cuts

By AP
Monday, March 1, 2010

EU finance chief tells Greece to make more cuts

ATHENS, Greece — European Union Finance Commissioner Olli Rehn says Greece must make still more spending cuts to get out of its debt crisis.

Rehn is in Athens Monday, after officials from the EU and International Monetary Fund inspected Greek public finances last week.

Rehn says he asked Greece’s government to announce tougher economic austerity measures “in the coming days” to control the country’s ballooning deficit.

Greece’s acute debt crisis, and fears of default, have shaken confidence in the euro.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — The EU and Greece negotiated Monday over making more painful budget cuts amid reports that fellow European nations, like France and Germany, are preparing a rescue package for the indebted country.

Europe’s financial affairs chief Olli Rehn was in Athens to meet Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou, Prime Minister George Papandreou and other senior officials, to address the austerity program which the EU has warned must be expanded.

The talks came amid reports that officials in fellow European countries are preparing a bailout for Greece, to be finalized this week.

The Wall Street Journal reported that state-owned banks and bond investors in France and Germany would be willing to buy as much as euro30 billion ($41 billion) in Greek bonds to calm market fears of a default. It cited anonymous sources familiar with the situation.

This could help the country meet its short-term debt needs, as some euro20 billion ($27 billion) worth of government bonds mature by the end of May. Greece plans to borrow some euro54 billion through sovereign debt issues this year, and has so far raised around euro13 billion.

In a television interview Sunday, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said she was confident Greece would manage to successfully refinance “via the means that we are now studying … involving private partners, public partners, or both.”

She did not provide further details.

“Greece will not be left in the lurch … on condition of course that it respects the engagements it took vis-a-vis its European partners in its stabilization plan,” she said.

Although German Chancellor Angela Merkel did not explicitly rule out the reported rescue measures, she denied any taxpayer money would be spent on Greece: “We have a contract which rules out the possibility of bailing out other nations,” Merkel told German broadcaster ARD in an interview Sunday night.

Papandreou is due to see Merkel in Berlin on Friday, and will fly to Washington March 9 for talks with U.S. President Barack Obama.

On Monday, he pledged again to pull Greece through its worst postwar economic slump and appealed for ordinary Greeks to back the effort.

“It is extremely urgent for us to address the dramatic fiscal problem, because it is threatening to strip us of any ability to determine our own fate,” Papandreou told a cabinet meeting. “And we will do so. We will not allow Greece to slide further, or finally sink.

“We are asking Greeks today to join in the common effort to save our country. And the overwhelming majority is prepared to do so.”

Under intense EU pressure to show tangible fiscal progress or tighten the belt more, Greek officials have pledged to take further action if needed but are balking at additional cuts to the salaries of the country’s estimated 750,000 public sector workers.

Greece shocked its EU partners and global markets last year, abruptly revising its budget overspending figures to 12.7 percent of annual economic output — over four times the EU limit and up from an initial estimate of under 4 percent of GDP. The country’s woes undermined confidence in the common European currency and sent Greece’s borrowing costs to crippling heights.

The spread between Greek 10-year bonds and equivalent German issues — a key indicator of market trust — was at 340 basis points Monday, a very high level suggesting markets remain worried.

The EU has given Athens until March 16 to show progress with its pledge to cut the deficit by four percent of GDP this year, gradually bringing it to under 3 percent in 2012.

The center-left government, which came to power five months ago, has announced a freeze on public sector salaries and hiring, while raising consumer taxes and retirement ages.

However, a team of inspectors from the EU, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund last week urged further cuts. Labor Minister Andreas Loverdos said Brussels was looking for an extra reduction in outlays of about euro1.4 billion ($1.9 billion), denying press reports the figure was closer to euro5 billion.

Opinion polls show most Greeks understand the need for belt-tightening. A survey published in Sunday’s Real News newspaper found that 53 percent of respondents think additional austerity will be needed, while 58.7 percent are prepared to make further sacrifices. Some 75 percent backed further public spending cuts, but more than 87 percent opposed pension cuts. The poll gave no margin of error.

But labor unions fiercely oppose many of the measures announced so far.

Taxi drivers will be on strike on Tuesday and Wednesday, and kiosk owners are closing their businesses Tuesday. Both unions protest government plans to force them to issue receipts, a new attempt to crack down on rampant tax evasion.

Some 50,000 people demonstrated through Athens last week during a general strike against the austerity plan.

On Tuesday, parliament is expected to approve draft legislation to improve data reporting transparency and make the national statistics service independent of government intervention. The reforms follow years of unreliable accounting practices, which contributed to the abrupt revision in Greece’s deficit figures and drew blistering criticism from Brussels.

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