The Philippine Star

Greece set to exit bailout, still faces daunting challenges

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ATHENS (Reuters) – Greece exits the last of its three bailouts on Aug. 20 and hopes to be able to borrow again in internatio­nal markets after a nearly nine-year debt crisis that shrank the economy by a quarter and forced it to implement painful austerity measures.

The crisis has proven deeply traumatic for Greeks who had enthusiast­ically swapped drachmas for euros in 2001. Adoption of the single currency ushered in an era of cheap credit that funded a splurge in private consumptio­n and public spending that sent Greece’s budget and current deficits ballooning.

Since the debt crisis exploded in early 2010, four successive government­s have fought to keep bankruptcy at bay, relying on the biggest bailout in economic history, more than 260 billion euros lent by Greece’s euro zone partners and the IMF.

As Athens now eyes a return to normality and reclaiming its economic sovereignt­y, the scars remain – banks are saddled with huge bad loan portfolios and Greece’s public debt load is still the highest in the euro zone, at 180 percent of national output.

But sunshine is breaking through the clouds. The economy, which shrank by 26 percent in the crisis years, has started to grow, tourism is booming and unemployme­nt is slowly coming down – to 19.5 percent from a peak of almost 28 percent.

“If there is a lesson that we learned from the crisis it is that, under any circumstan­ces, you must try to protect macroecono­mic stability,” said Panos Tsakloglou, chief economist of the previous coalition government.

“Populist policies that may win some votes today and have disastrous effects some years down the road must be avoided at all costs. Otherwise, sooner or later we will end up in the situation we are in now,” he said.

Greece’s economy grew for a fifth straight quarter in Januaryto-March, the expansion picking up pace to a yearly 2.3 percent, a sign the recovery is gaining traction, helped by net exports. The EU Commission sees 1.9 percent growth this year.

But skepticism remains, including at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund which sees the recovery strengthen­ing and growth reaching two percent this year and 2.4 percent in 2019, but says that “external and domestic risks are tilted to the downside.”

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