Kathimerini English

Bargaining on pension cuts kicks off

IMF insists that the measure has structural significan­ce while ESM’s Regling says that a deal is a deal

- BY EIRINI CHRYSOLORA

The issue of the pension cuts scheduled for January will dominate today’s meeting between the creditors’ mission chiefs and Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos in Athens, with senior officials stressing that the eurozone expects Athens to implement the fiscal commitment­s and the reforms it has pledged.

The chief representa­tives of the country’s creditors met yesterday with officials from opposition parties New Democracy, Movement for Change and To Potami. Sources say that their attitude showed they consider the reduction of pensions to be a fiscally neutral measure, because it will be offset by the socalled countermea­sures, so that no pension cuts will mean no offsetting measures either.

Kathimerin­i understand­s that even the representa­tive of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund agreed that the measure will not have an impact on the budget, but did tell a party representa­tive that the Fund considers the measure to have a structural character.

At the same time Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said in an interview with Euronews that if Athens meets its fiscal targets “we may avoid a measure that is needless as well as against growth and non-structural.” Asked what will happen if Greece fails to make its targets, Tsipras responded that Greece must find a way to make them.

The meetings with the parties yesterday illustrate­d that the creditors are sticking to their position, and only the European Commission appears more flexible on the pensions issue, while the IMF is insisting on the significan­ce of the measure for the social security system. In any case, no decisions are likely to be made before the submission of the final budget draft in November.

In an interview with Capital.gr yesterday European Stability Mechanism chief Klaus Regling reiterated that the fiscal package voted through by the Greek Parliament last year included the social security reform, saying that therefore this is part of the agreement. He pointed to the negotiatio­ns starting today with Tsakalotos on the issue, saying that “this is the proper framework for discussion­s to begin regarding the implementa­tion of the commitment­s the Greek government has undertaken.”

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