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Dublin: 14 °C Monday 20 May, 2013

Greece hirings “breached EU/IMF loan rules”

A new report suggests that Greece breached the EU/IMF loan agreement rules. Meanwhile, the country’s new prime minister is recovering from eye surgery.

Image: Petros Giannakouris/AP/Press Association Images

DID GREECE BREACH the rules of its EU/IMF loan agreement?

A new report suggests so. According to the Bangkok Post, a report from a mission of creditors to Athens, as well as data from the country’s outgoing financial minister, George Zannias, said the country breached the rules by hiring staff in the public sector – 70,000 of them in two years.

Details of the report, released yesterday, were published in the Greek newspaper To Vima.

RTE reports that Greece was bringing in the new staff onto local councils, although the country had been legalising rules to reduce the number of staff in the public sector.

The news comes as an EU/IMF audit is due to take place in the country.

Critical meeting

Greece’s new prime minister was released from hospital today, two days after undergoing eye surgery that will prevent him from travelling to a European Union summit in Brussels this week.

The meeting will be critical for Greece, coming just a week after its new coalition government was formed.

Antonis Samaras underwent an operation to repair a detached retina on Saturday, and his doctors have said he will have to remain at home for several days to recover.

The country’s incoming finance minister, Vassilis Rapanos, meanwhile, was still in hospital after being admitted on Friday following a collapse hours before he was due to be sworn in to office. The hospital said over the weekend that his condition was improving.

The bouts of illness led to the postponement of a visit to Athens today by the heads of the county’s debt inspectors known as the Troika: the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF.

Summit

Samaras has appointed Foreign Minister Dimitris Avramopoulos to lead the Greek delegation at the June 28 – 29 summit.

Samaras’ government, comprised of his New Democracy conservatives, their long-time socialist rivals PASOK and the small Democratic Left party, issued a policy statement on Saturday outlining changes it would like to make to the terms of its international bailout agreement with other EU countries and the International Monetary Fund.

The changes include repealing certain tax hikes, freezing public sector layoffs and extending by two years the mid-2014 deadline for tough austerity measures.

But the government will still have to find other ways to make savings, as it tries to reform its economy and continue receiving funds from its rescue loans.

Latest figures

The latest figures released by the finance ministry today showed that the budget deficit for the first five months of the year was better than expected, standing at €10.87 billion instead of the target of €12.89 on a modified cash basis.

Revenue, however, was below target with the state budget net revenue standing at €19.666 billion, €926 million short of the targeted €20.592 billion, due in part to lower domestic consumer demand and lower tax revenues.

- Additional reporting AP

Read: New Greek PM undergoes eye surgery>

Read: Greek coalition seeks negotiation on range of austerity measures>

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Comments (10 Comments)

  • random 25/06/12 #

    Wow, when these guys pull sickies they really commit to it.

    Reply
  • I can understand why Germany is unhappy with this whole situation. They’ve lent billions to Greece only for them to hire 70,000 extra public servants and in Ireland we’re using our bailout money to pay increments to our existing ones.

    Reply
    • We’re also using the bailout money (which is really a loan david, by the way) to cover the gambling losses of ze german bankers, so I’m sure frau merkel will get over it.

      Oh, and a fine gael underling shoehorning a fine gael ministers talking point du jour into a comment? TOTALLY unexpected, I’m sure nobody will notice…….

      Reply
    • Well believe it or not but members of political parties tend to have broad agreement with what their senior TDs believe.

      It’s kinda why they signed up in the first place….

      Reply
    • @ TTL : You are writing to say you have a deep understanding of what Frau Merkel and the government think. The problem is, when I read the comments you write, you do not have a good understanding of what The German government think. If you want to know these things, find and taken in the information. Now, you only have uninformed opinions.

      Reply
    • Well Klaus, as you obviously are in a position too inform us irlanders, what DOES the german government think of the Irish taxpayer having to cover german banking losses?

      Reply
    • @ David. Just pointing out the fact that you have a tendency to spin the daily talking points from fine gael hq into your comments. Its quite obvious and quite comical in equal measure.

      Reply
    • TTL: Anglo was an Irish bank, but that does not mean it is fair that the Irish taxpayer should pay for the failure. You agree with me on this. Anglo was not the property and not the responsibility of the Irish people. The failure of German banks is not the responsibility of the German taxpayer. The same logic must apply. It was the previous Irish government who decided to take on the banking debt owed by banks within the Irish financial zone. This was a very bad decision. Germans think this is crazy and have thankfully passed laws that would stop Merkel’s government doing the same to us, our banks are also failing. But it was the Irish government’s decision, not Germany’s. If you believe Germany forced this on Ireland, I am sorry but you are wrong.

      Reply
    • Klaus, if you actually read my post properly, you will see that I mention angela merkel and german bankers, not german voters or taxpayers.

      Reply
    • @ TTL : you asked me a question, and I answered clearly. My first comment was commenting on your general comments for the last month: pushing a story that the rich, power-hungry Germans are laughing at the Irish and planning to enslave Europe. This is not true and provokes people into aggression and conflict. Not very left-wing, this contradicts your name. If you want change, it is through proper control of your government, not through blaming and insulting other countries.

      Reply

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