Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Greek parliament votes for bail out

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ATHENS — Greece’s parliament will vote on a new package of tax hikes and reforms demanded by its internatio­nal lenders on Sunday, two days before euro zone finance ministers assess whether Athens qualifies for muchneeded bailout loans.

The bill would increase value added tax by 1 percentage point to 24 percent, raise tax on fuel, tobacco and alcohol, liberalise the sale of banks’ non-performing loans and detail the set-up a new privatisat­ion fund, government officials said.

It will also include details on a contingenc­y mechanism to impose tighter austerity measures, which will be activated only if Greece misses its fiscal targets, the officials said on Monday.

The vote is expected to test Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ left-led government, which has a thin majority of 153 lawmakers in the 300-seat parliament.

Athens says that if activated, the contingenc­y measures will not hurt the poor.

Passing the reforms before the Eurogroup meeting on May 24, is a demand of internatio­nal lenders to wrap up the review which will unlock the next tranche of funds that Athens will use to pay IMF loans, state arrears and ECB bonds maturing in July.

Talks between Greece and the lenders — the European Stability Mechanism, European Commission, European Central Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund — over the reforms have dragged on for months.

The delays have been mainly due to a rift between EU and IMF lenders over Greece’s fiscal progress and the sustainabi­lity of its debt.

The IMF believes that without debt relief or additional measures Athens will miss a bailout targets for 3,5 percent of GDP primary surplus in 2018. —

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