The Borneo Post

Growth gives Greece fresh ammunition against austerity

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ATHENS: The Greek government hailed figures showing the debtladen country returned to annual growth in 2016, using it for a fresh assault on austerity measures sought by its creditors.

The economy grew 0.3 per cent last year, according to AFP calculatio­ns using early estimates from national statistics agency Elstat, despite a contractio­n in the last quarter.

The figure, in line with Brussels’ latest projection announced Monday, marks only the second increase in annual gross domestic product (GDP) since 2008.

The European Commission also pencilled in Greek growth of 2.7 per cent this year and 3.1 per cent in 2018.

Government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopou­los said the estimates showed that “the Greek economy has definitely returned to growth”.

He insisted at his weekly press briefing that there was “no basis” for additional austerity measures after the completion of Greece’s current bailout in 2018.

Around 2,000 farmers descended on Athens on Tuesday to protest against new tax hikes and pension reforms that are part of Greece’s austerity programme.

The protests came after months of failed talks between Athens and its eurozone and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) creditors, raising fears of a new debt crisis that could again jeopardise Greece’s place in the monetary union.

Athens faces debt repayments of 7.0 billion euros ( US$ 7.44 billion) this summer that it cannot afford without defusing the feud that is holding up new loans from Greece’s 86 billion euro bailout.

At the core of the row is whether Greece can deliver on budget targets that the IMF says are based on overly optimistic economic forecasts.

The IMF, quietly backed by Germany, insists that more pension cuts and tax hikes are necessary to reach those targets.

The government bitterly refuses more reforms, with Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras warning creditors on Saturday to “stop playing with fire” over his country’s debt problems.

Top EU economic affairs official Pierre Moscovici is due in Athens for talks with Tsipras on Wednesday to try and unblock the negotiatio­ns.

Talks in Brussels between Greece and its creditors on Friday ended with no breakthrou­gh, although Eurogroup chief Jeroen Dijsselblo­em said some progress was made.

The next meeting of eurozone ministers, on February 20, is seen as an unofficial deadline to end the stalemate ahead of important elections in European countries including France, Germany and The Netherland­s.

But Dijsselblo­em warned Tuesday the standoff was likely to drag on.

“The IMF has to come on board,” he told Dutch broadcaste­r RTLZ.

“It will take more time. People think that as there is a Eurogroup meeting next week we must have something worked out. But that has not been my planning.”

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