The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Greece, creditors seek swift deal

- By Nicholas Paphitis

Representa­tives of Greece’s bailout creditors are due in Athens to restart talks on further cutbacks, European officials said Monday, as they confirmed that the country last year far exceeded its budget targets.

European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said the negotiatio­ns are expected to start Tuesday and should last several days, with the objective of reaching an agreement “as soon as possible.”

That would clear the way for further talks on easing Greece’s debt burden, currently at 179 percent of GDP.

Following long delays in the negotiatio­ns, Greece has already agreed to further slash pensions in 2019 and drasticall­y expand the tax base in 2020 by reducing the current tax-free threshold.

Greece is also under pressure to speed up the sale of infrastruc­ture and utilities. And the country’s privatizat­ion agency announced Monday that a consortium led by private German investor Deutsche Invest Equity Partners has been named the highest bidder for a 67-percent stake in the Port of Thessaloni­ki, in northern Greece, offering 231.9 million euros ($252 million).

The forthcomin­g bailout talks are expected to focus on the final details of the next round of aus-

terity measures, set to be worth about 3.6 billion euros ($3.85 billion).

Schinas also noted that Eurostat, the European

Union statistica­l authority, has confirmed Greece’s 2016 budget figures, which far exceeded forecasts.

The primary budget surplus — which excludes debt servicing costs — reached 3.9 percent of annual output, according to the system of calculatio­ns used

by Greece’s statistica­l authority. According to the terms of the country’s bailout, the surplus was 4.2 percent. Either way, it far overshot the initial target of 0.5 percent of GDP.

Schinas said the surplus, which is subject to final verificati­on, “confirms

the trends which we at the Commission have been reporting for a while,” and expressed confidence the country can meet its budget targets in 2017 and 2018.

Greeks have suffered seven years of repeated income cuts and tax hikes after

the public finances imploded in 2010, forcing the country to rely on internatio­nal bailouts.

To secure the rescue loans, successive government­s imposed harsh cutbacks, amid a rapidly shrinking economy that has lost a quarter of its

pre-crisis value, and record-high unemployme­nt. The current, third bailout signed by the left-led government in 2015 runs until mid-2018 — after which the country is expected to be in a position to start borrowing again from internatio­nal bond markets.

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