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Greece emerges from bailout owing €289 billion

MinisterCentenoFinanceUnsurprisingly, having reviewed the video of the President of the Eurogroup’s speech on the Greek situation, Yanis Varoufakis compares it to North Korean propaganda.

Portuguse MP, João Galamba, criticises the speech by Mário Centeno, who also is Portugal’s Minister of Finance, calling it "regrettable."

The video recording of Mario Centeno congratulating the Greeks for the end of the financial assistance programme, according to Varoufakis, shows the European Commission adding insult to the unbearable misery of Greece.

In the cheery message, Centeno patronises the Greek population: "on a special day for Greece," after "a long and winding road" from which "we all learn our lessons," and the crisis "is history now."

Centeno’s view on Greece’s economy differs from the reality of the population as he patiently explains that "new jobs are being created, there is a trade and fiscal surplus, the economy has been reformed and modernised."

The Portuguese minister acknowledges that "these benefits are not yet felt by the entire population", but that "they gradually will be."

João Galamba says that video is "regrettable," since its content "erases the disaster that was the Greek adjustment programme and the dire behavior of the European institutions."

Greece was the European country hardest hit by the economic and financial crisis and was the first to seek financial assistance. The completion of its third programme follows Portugal (2011-2014), Ireland, Spain and Cyprus.

Greece will be subject to "enhanced post-program surveillance" with missions visiting every three months to ensure the government continues a, "prudent fiscal policy."

Centeno fails to note that Greece is trading as insolvent, it can never hope to repay €288.7 billion in loans and the fear at the European Commission is that the country will default and vote to leave the Union, following the UK’s bungled lead.

Emerging from its third bailout, Athens must refinance its debt despite nursing an economy that has shrunk by a quarter. Few will want Greek bonds so the interest rate will be pitched accordingly, adding more pain and misery.

The head of the European Stability Mechanism, Klaus Regling, said that Greece could be a success story just like Portugal, Spain, Ireland and Cyprus as long as it continues to work on restoring its partners' trust. Multi-millionaire Regling said he intends to celebrate with a glass of ouzo.

Greece’s Prime Minister, Alexis Tsipras, now has to explain to his people, 20% of whom are unemployed, what the exit from the emergency bailout actually means for the economy, seeing as he now is back in charge of running it.

“We are entering a new era for the Greek economy and Greece,” government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopoulos told Real FM radio.

Austerity measures and high taxes will continue as the population eyes the debt mountain and weeps.

 

 

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Comments  

0 #10 TerryP 2018-08-25 07:34
Quoting Denby:
I thought the news report of Mario Centeno's reaction to Greece emerging from the bailout was good. It has been a long road for the Greek people and their achievement needed to be acknowledged by the EU.
The people of Greece wanted to remain in the European Union and they made their decision quite clear at the time. The general population were fed up with the reality of civil servants retiring at the age of 50 and so on and now they have to work toward building their country again.
This is not impossible when you consider how Britain pulled together after ww1 when the country was in afinancial ruin and with the help of the USA, giving a huge loan to build the country again it has gone from strength to strength.

Hmmm... a positive comment about the UK, hopefully a change for the better from this correspondent....
+1 #9 Denby 2018-08-24 23:05
I thought the news report of Mario Centeno's reaction to Greece emerging from the bailout was good. It has been a long road for the Greek people and their achievement needed to be acknowledged by the EU.
The people of Greece wanted to remain in the European Union and they made their decision quite clear at the time. The general population were fed up with the reality of civil servants retiring at the age of 50 and so on and now they have to work toward building their country again.
This is not impossible when you consider how Britain pulled together after ww1 when the country was in afinancial ruin and with the help of the USA, giving a huge loan to build the country again it has gone from strength to strength.
-1 #8 Harrison 2018-08-23 16:18
Portugal rushed to pay back the IMF part of their bailout (26bn euros approx a third) on the assumption this would stop the nosy IMF visits. But it hasn't - the IMF still tag along as advisers thanks mainly to Germany not wanting to allow, any slippage back. Target 2 ratings for Portugal now need to be watched carefully for signs of capital flight. Particularly if, as expected later this summer, Italy's borrowing rates begin to go AWOL.
+4 #7 dw 2018-08-22 18:08
The ongoing financial rape of Greece is another international scandal that the corporate media presents as a total inversion of the truth, blaming feckless Greeks rather than criminal international bankers.
-1 #6 Margaridaana 2018-08-22 15:32
Perhaps it would be better if all these countries in debt left the EU.and went back to 'creative accounting' They seemed to muddle on pretty well in those days!
+3 #5 Chip 2018-08-22 12:16
So they've "emerged" owing €289 billion. Hilarious!
What a poisonous outfit the EU are - they demand money from the rich countries on a non-returnable basis then lend it with interest to the poor. Immoral, and in any decent society illegal.
+8 #4 Peter Booker 2018-08-21 16:06
"At the beginning of the “crisis,” which would have easily been resolved by writing down part of the debt, the Greek debt was 129% of Greek Gross Domestic Product. Today Greek debt is 180% of GDP.

Why?

Greece was lent more money to pay interest to Greece’s creditors, so that they would not have to lose one cent. The additonal lending, called a “bailout” by the presstitute financial media, was not a bailout of Greece. It was a bailout of Greece’s creditors."

Not my words, but they seem to summarise the position of Greece and of the brutal heartlessness of the world´s financial institutions.
+9 #3 Ioannis 2018-08-21 12:24
Particularly unfortunate that it was the Portuguese Finance Minister saying this as all educated Greeks are well aware that Portugal is still under, and will be for many years to come, IMF (and therefore ECB) eurozone supervision. Having their man Vítor Constâncio as No2 in the ECB kept attention away from Portugal but he is now going. And all attention now switches to Italy and its threat to the eurozone (and my country Greece's recovery)
+2 #2 Peter Booker 2018-08-21 09:50
This is a lot of noise about nothing. The Greeks will notice no difference, nor will anyone else.

“We are entering a new era for the Greek economy and Greece,” says the spokesman, carefully avoiding any remark which shows how it will be different for his voters.
0 #1 Charly 2018-08-20 23:54
let's forgive this man's ignorance…. Living in a banana republic he doesn't know better. Of course it should have been more correct, more adequat, more civilised, more.... if he kept his (political) mouth closed !

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