Finance Blog number 1

February 6, 2010

Papandreou Says Greece Has No Plans for New Deficit Measures

Filed under: news — Tags: , , — Sun @ 2:00 am

Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou said today the government has no plans for new measures to curb the European Union’s largest deficit.

Plans to tame the government finances are “credible,” he told reporters in New Delhi. The EU backed on Feb. 3 the government’s proposals to trim the deficit after Papandreou pledged to raise fuel taxes and the retirement age and extended a wage freeze to all public workers.

Papandreou said today the proposals need to be implemented to achieve their goals, and the nation has substantial funds available from the EU. Yesterday the International Monetary fund said the Greek plan is “appropriate” and European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said he’s confident Greece can get the deficit under control.

The risk premium investors demand to buy Greek debt over comparable German 10-year bonds widened 10 basis points to 364 basis points the highest in a week. The benchmark ASE stock index fell for a third day, declining 2 percent, bringing its slide for this week to more than 9 percent.

The deficit reached 12.7 percent of gross domestic product last year, and officials are battling to convince investors it can shrink the shortfall to within the EU’S 3 percent limit in 2012 and avoid a bailout. Yesterday Greece’s biggest union approved the second mass strike this month and tax collectors began a 48-hour walkout, suggesting that workers are ignoring Papandreou’s call for sacrifice.

“He can’t come out and say more needs to be done, he has to talk the plans up,” said Peter Dixon, an economist at Commerzbank AG in London. “The question becomes whether Greece can follow through with the plans they put in place and whether they are enough. The jury is still out on that.”

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