Kathimerini English

PM eyes larger budget surplus

Overtaxati­on set to yield larger sum of which Tsipras might give a portion to flood victims, middle class

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With this year’s primary budget surplus set to far exceed expectatio­ns, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras will have a significan­t buffer, in addition to the 1.4 billion euros he pledged last week in handouts to Greeks on low incomes, to offer other social groups, Kathimerin­i understand­s.

According to sources, the fiscal surplus for 2017 is expected to hit 3.1 percent of gross domestic product, far above the original target of 1.75 percent of GDP set by Greece’s internatio­nal creditors.

If this higher target is clinched, it would yield between 300 and 700 million euros, according to current estimates.

Tsipras is expected to offer this additional sum to those Greeks whose homes or businesses were damaged or destroyed in last week’s flash floods in western Attica.

Further, a portion of the sum might be given to middle-income taxpayers with annual earnings in the 20,000-30,000-euro bracket – in a bid to fend off criticism from the political opposition that the budget surplus was effectivel­y raised through the overtaxati­on of the Greek middle class.

There are some within the ranks of the government who believe that a wiser course of action would be to keep the additional cash as a buffer in state coffers.

In any case, Tsipras will wait for the green light from representa­tives of Greece’s foreign creditors who are due to return to Athens this month to resume their latest review of the government’s implementa­tion of structural reforms tied to the country’s third bailout.

Tsipras announced the 1.4 billion euros in handouts last week in an apparent bid to show that his leftist-led coalition is giving something back to austerity-weary Greeks who, while in opposition, he had pledged to relieve. However, the move was also widely interprete­d as an attempt to distract public opinion from a series of political problems, such as a controvers­ial sale of Greek missiles and bombs to Saudi Arabia.

A bill with details of the distributi­on of the 1.4-billion-euro surplus is to go before a vote in Parliament today and is expected to pass with the support of coalition lawmakers.

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