Kathimerini English

Fresh obstacles on the road to recovery

The government seems to undermine its own message that Greece has changed and is safe for investment

- BY YANNIS PALAIOLOGO­S

The road to fiscal sovereignt­y for Greece is not a smooth one. Despite the government’s optimism and the helpful assurances of European officials, there has been no shortage of reminders of the challenges the country faces as it heads toward the postmemora­ndum era.

On March 5, the Hellenic Statistica­l Authority (ELSTAT) published its provisiona­l data on growth in 2017, according to which gross domestic product increased by 1.4 percent. This was against a forecast of 2.7 percent in the budget bill passed in late 2016, and 1.6 percent estimated by the European Commission just two weeks earlier.

On the same day that ELSTAT delivered this unwelcome news, Europe was nursing a bad hangover from the Italian elections. Talks on the formation of a new Italian government will drag on, analysts believe, and are by no means guaranteed to succeed. Yet the voters’ message was crystal-clear: It was a triumph of anti-European populism, with the Five Star Movement as the clear frontrunne­r and the xenophobic League emerging as the biggest party on the right of the political spectrum.

The hostility that both these parties have expressed toward the euro and the barrage of pre-election pledges of new benefits and major tax breaks raise the likelihood of significan­t tensions between Rome and Brussels in the months ahead. Instead of becoming part of the solution, Italy has become an even bigger part of the European problem.

The markets’ initial reaction to the election results has been calm. But protracted uncertaint­y may increase nervousnes­s among investors holding certain classes of European government bonds.

According to Blaise Antin, head of emerging markets at the American TCW fund (managing capital of more than $200 billion), in a negative scenario in Italian politics “Greece and other eurozone periphery countries would likely come under some initial pressure.” He adds that it’s hard to make more specific prediction­s at this point.

At the same time, the prospect of the European Central Bank tapering its bond buyback program (QE) as of September removes yet another vital layer of protection from Southern European bonds, especially those of Italy and Greece. Nor, of course, can we underestim­ate the effect of possible turbulence from the expected rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve, or a trade war.

January’s seven-year bond was “poorly timed” by Athens, Antin says, arguing that its travails since “ought to reinforce the need for a Greek precaution­ary program post-August [when the bailout expires].”

Referring to the large proportion of the recent issue – around one-third – that ended up in the hands of hedge funds, many of which dumped the bonds as fast as possible, Antin notes, “the difficulti­es with the new bond show that it will be more complicate­d and expensive for Greece to build the cash reserve it needs without more clarity regarding the post-August landscape and the shape and extent of debt relief measures.”

Wrong messages

Amid this increasing­ly complicate­d internatio­nal environmen­t, the government appears to be underminin­g its own message that Greece has changed and is now safe for investment. A new law passed this month granting permanent status to fixedcontr­act state workers hired after November 2016 illustrate­s the enduring of Frangiskos Koutentaki­s, a Crete University lecturer, former aide to Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and general secretary of Fiscal Policy, as chief coordinato­r of the Parliament’s Budget Office is yet another sign of Tsipras’s aversion to checks and balances. allure of the clientelis­t mentality.

Meanwhile, the appointmen­t of Frangiskos Koutentaki­s, a Crete University lecturer, former aide to Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and general secretary of Fiscal Policy, as chief coordinato­r of the Parliament’s Budget Office is yet another sign of Tsipras’s aversion to checks and balances.

The politiciza­tion of the state and the lack of tolerance for criticism are by no means new phenomena, but they have assumed worrying proportion­s, as the governing coalition seeks to control every independen­t voice, in its belief that while it may be in office, it is still not in power.

For foreign investors, the law facilitati­ng clientelis­t hirings and the decision to effectivel­y gag the body whose role it is to conduct an independen­t assessment of economic policy are signs that come September, the bad old habits will return with a vengeance.

 ??  ?? The appointmen­t
The appointmen­t

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