The Borneo Post

Greek parliament approves ‘final bailout’ budget

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ATHENS: Greece’s parliament approved the 2018 budget, described by the government as the last under the country’s multi-billion bailout, which nominally ends in August.

“After eight years...this is the final bailout budget parliament is called to approve. We leave behind a period nobody will want to remember,” Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras told the chamber.

“We have regained credibilit­y in managing public funds,” Tsipras said.

The Greek finance ministry is maintainin­g high taxation with the aim of collecting a budget surplus equivalent to 3.8 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP), excluding debt payments in 2018.

And the economy is expected to grow by 2.5 per cent, compared to 1.6 per cent this year.

“This is the first budget of normality in the past seven years,” said defence minister and government coalition partner Panos Kammenos.

“There will be no more bargaining for (bailout) loan tranches,” he said.

The ministry last month said that enough “fiscal room” was achieved to permit tax cuts after 2018, when the country is scheduled to exit its third multi-billion EU-backed bailout.

The government has already legislated pension and tax break cuts that will take effect even after Greece exits the bailout, in 2019 and 2020. EU economic affairs chief Pierre Moscovici has also said that Greece will remain under fiscal supervisio­n until it repays 75 per cent of its EU loans.

“There are tight restrictio­ns until at least 2022,” said main opposition leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis. “Greeks hope this will be the last budget by your government.” — AFP

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