Friday, February 10, 2012

If The Greeks thought they were subject to extortionate demands before.....


The 30 measures Athens must pass

 The interventions that form a condition for the first tranche of the new package
By Sotiris Nikas
Thirty tough legislative interventions affecting key sectors have to be rushed through Parliament for the government to secure the first tranche of the new bailout package. The measures are the following:
- Reductions in pharmaceutical spending by 1.076 billion euros, in defense by 300 million euros, in arms by 300 million euros and in doctors’ overtime by 50 million euros.
- The abolition of 550 deputy mayor posts, saving 30 million euros.
- Cuts in consumer spending and election allowances amounting to 270 million euros, in other allowances and grants by 190 million euros, and in the Public Investment Program by 400 million euros.
- Ministerial decisions for the application of objective criteria for the self-employed, for the full application of the single salary system for all state corporations, for the Public Power Corporation to pay its revenues from the special property tax paid through the electricity bills to the state within two days (instead of 20), and on the cost of permits for new trucks for public use.
- A 22 percent reduction of the minimum wage, with people below the age of 25 years taking a 32 percent cut.
- The suspension of the additional allowance for every two years of work that civil servants were paid.
- The maximum period for collective labor contracts to be set at three years, the duration of existing contracts to be up to one year, the extension of expired contracts to be by just three months. Other allowances for past experience, children etc will be maintained after contract expiry until a new contract is signed.
- An end to the unilateral resort to arbitration and to contracts with a specific time limit that expire with retirement.
- The reduction of social security contributions by 2 percent.
- The abolition of the organizations providing state-subsidized housing (OEK and OEE).
- The amendment of regulations for expired debts.
- The completion of inspections for value-added tax payment.
- A pension cut in healthy funds by 15 percent and by the same rate in auxiliary pensions, whose funds will also be reformed.
- A restructuring of the banking system and strengthening of the fund safeguarding bank deposits.
- A revision of the operation of the Credit Stability Fund.
- The deregulation of 17 closed-shop professions.






1 comment:

  1. http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_wsite2_1_10/02/2012_427225

    Having been operating on emergency reserves for the last few days, the country’s power and natural gas systems are now at a critical point.

    Bulgaria has stopped exporting electrical energy for the time being owing to the current cold weather in that country. These exports cover 4 percent of Greece’s demand, and Sofia’s decision is likely to create pressure on the Greek grid, which has been has operating with limited plant availability for the last few months.

    The natural gas system is also facing serious problems as Turkey continues to withhold all quantities destined for Greece due to its own requirements, while the Public Gas Corporation (DEPA) is having a hard time finding emergency quantities of natural gas on the spot market to satisfy its needs. Demand registered a new record on Thursday, soaring to 248,000 megawatt hours.

    Conditions worsened due to the reported refusal of the natural gas grid operator (DESFA) to issue a permit for Algerian company Sonatrach’s ship to unload the emergency quantities that DEPA had acquired due to an absence of the necessary papers.

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