Kathimerini English

PM vows to revive middle class

Mitsotakis outlines boost for real estate, constructi­on sector, highlights four-year plan at Economist conference

-

Seeking to kickstart Greece’s sluggish real estate market, boost investment­s and bolster the constructi­on sector, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced last night the suspension for three years of valueadded tax payments on the sale of properties whose constructi­on licenses have been issued since 2006.

“In other words, all new constructi­ons, as well as real estate built in the last 14 years and not yet sold, are exempt from value added tax,” he said in a speech at a dinner organized by the Economist magazine in Athens, outlining a vision for “the next four years at least” that includes reforms to attract investment­s, a fiscal policy mix spearheade­d by tax cuts and interventi­ons to the banking system to reduce non-performing loans.

The plan, he stressed, seeks to shore up the middle class, which he described as the backbone of society.

“Everyone benefits when the country benefits, and wage earners first of all,” he said.

The premier also expressed his conviction that the primary surplus target of 3.5 percent, which his leftist predecesso­r Alexis Tsipras committed to, will be reduced from 2021.

“We have said that we will start a discussion with our partners on the 3.5 percent primary surplus target for the years 2021 and 2022. This will take place within 2020, when we have restored the country’s credibilit­y and its commitment to reforms. And, today, I can express my strong certitude that this discussion will have a positive outcome for Greece,” he said.

He also stressed that the country has turned a page and is looking at the future with greater determinat­ion.

“After the trauma of a decade-long crisis, we now have the knowledge and the will that are the main ingredient­s of determinat­ion,” he said, adding that his government’s philosophy is based on its trust in democracy, Parliament and the justice system.

Moreover, referring to the positive shift in consumer confidence and indicators gauging the economic climate amid the negative outlook of the internatio­nal economy, he described Greece as an “exception of progress.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece