Kathimerini English

Greece’s new century

COMMENTARY

- | BY ANDREAS YANNOPOULO­S * * Andreas Yannopoulo­s is the founder of Public Affairs and Networks and the InvestGR Forum.

As Greece prepares to celebrate the bicentenni­al of the declaratio­n of its War of Independen­ce next month, the country is also poised to enter a new era in its economic developmen­t as a modern nation-state.

Greece’s modern history can be divided into several distinct periods. And on the long and often difficult road Greece has trodden over the last 200 years, there has been no shortage of setbacks: economic crises, sovereign defaults and misguided developmen­t policies, combined with wars, poverty, famine and emigration. And yet each of those periods has given birth to a new and better Greece that succeeded it.

Greece is entering such a new era now.

The first period of the Greek state, dating from the 1821 War of Independen­ce, was focused on consolidat­ing the nation rather than on building a stable economy. The country was born a runt state, half its current size, carved out of the slowly dying Ottoman Empire. Poor and primarily agricultur­al, Greece’s first period of economic developmen­t culminated in the imposition of internatio­nal financial controls in 1898.

From 1898 until the end of the civil war in 1949, Greece gained new territory, developed the foundation­s of its industrial base and welcomed a small but significan­t inflow of investment and human capital. But the country also suffered through the economic hardships of the Great Depression, political instabilit­y, several regional wars, brutal foreign occupation, devastatin­g civil war and the integratio­n of more than a million Greek refugees from Asia Minor.

From the end of the civil war until today, Greece moved forward economical­ly, with rapid developmen­t in the 1950s and 60s, and accession to the European Economic Community in 1981. But the oil crises of the 1970s and the accumulati­on of public debt – despite economic growth – led to the 2008 global financial crisis that pushed Greece into a decade-long financial crisis that erased many of the gains of the preceding 20 years.

But since emerging from special European and IMF oversight in 2018, Greece today is no longer on the margins of Europe and has establishe­d itself as a hub of economic activity in the greater region. As we, hopefully, move into the post-Covid era, Greece

is entering a fourth era in its economic developmen­t and, to a great extent, by leveraging the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

At the onset of the pandemic, the Greek government met the challenge by intensifyi­ng an ambitious reform program and setting new goals for the country. As a result, three areas, in particular, stand out as emerging growth drivers – innovation, life sciences and green energy.

Innovation and high-tech topped policymake­rs’ priorities, with tangible results. Microsoft recently announced a project to build cloud-computing data centers in Greece – a move that will upgrade the country’s digital infrastruc­ture significan­tly and contribute an estimated €1 billion to the local economy.

Amazon’s web services division, AWS, also just opened its first office in Athens, testifying to the emergence of Greece as a hub for tech and digital services. Other tech giants have also seen a future in Greece: Major multinatio­nals like Samsung, Daimler, Applied Materials, Cisco, Digital Realty and Tesla – among others – have been investing in the country’s up-and-coming tech sector.

Greece’s robust life sciences sector, already an export champion in the region, has been gaining fresh attention with the fight against Covid-19 and is attracting significan­t investment in pharmaceut­ical research and manufactur­ing. Recently, pharma giant Pfizer set up an R&D hub in the northern port city of Thessaloni­ki, while roughly 15% of all Greek startups are in the life sciences sector. With its quality health infrastruc­ture, more doctors per capita than any other OECD country, and

a tourism brand already associated with health and wellness, Greece is an attractive destinatio­n for medical treatment and for retirees. Through a number of initiative­s, the Greek government is now making an effort to tap into the European Union’s €4 trillion silver economy.

The Greek Green Deal, which foresees a complete phasing out of lignite by 2028 and doubling the contributi­on of renewable energy to the country’s energy mix by 2030, is already attracting large investment­s and growing exponentia­lly. Four projects totaling 2.8 GW of wind and solar power, and worth more than €2 billion, have been approved for fast-track status this year.

Internatio­nal auto giant Volkswagen has just announced a pilot project to transform the Greek island of Astypalaia into the Mediterran­ean’s first smart, green island with electric vehicles powered exclusivel­y by renewable energy. In the near future, Greece will introduce legislatio­n to allow the creation of offshore wind farms, tapping the Greek seas’ limitless wind energy.

These positive developmen­ts, which serve to diversify and strengthen the Greek economy, spring from targeted reforms and a new vision for Greece, as embodied in the country’s ambitious goals under the €750 billion NextGenera­tionEU program. A new era and the next steps Greece must take – the focus of this year’s InvestGR Forum – beckon. And if past is prologue, Greece is poised to begin a bright, new century in its modern history.

Workathlon will be hosting an online recruiting event for the hospitalit­y sector tomorrow and Friday. Tourism accommodat­ion workers from all over Greece and Cyprus can book interviews with dozens of hotels that are recruiting talented members for their teams by registerin­g for free at portal.workathlon.com/signup-events. Costa Navarino, Atlantica Hotels, Sani & Ikos Resorts, Amanzoe, Four Seasons, Tor Hotel Group, Louis Hotels, Club Med, Bluegr, Sunrise Hotels, Four Seasons Hotel Cyprus and S Resorts are just a few of a total of over 40 top brands that are looking forward to meeting hospitalit­y workers of every experience and background. Interest from candidates is unpreceden­ted, with this year’s participat­ion set to surpass all previous years.

 ??  ?? Cargo containers are seen at the container terminal in the port of Piraeus near Athens, in a file photo. ‘Greece today is no longer on the margins of Europe and has establishe­d itself as a hub of economic activity in the greater region,’ says the author.
Cargo containers are seen at the container terminal in the port of Piraeus near Athens, in a file photo. ‘Greece today is no longer on the margins of Europe and has establishe­d itself as a hub of economic activity in the greater region,’ says the author.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece