Sunday, February 3, 2013

Greece reality confronts Greek pol happy talk ....... despite everything in europe being fixed , all is still broken in Greece.....

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-02-03/greek-isles-cut-mainland-sixth-day-strikes-return-vengeance


Greek Isles Cut Off From Mainland For Sixth Day As Strikes Return With A Vengeance

Tyler Durden's picture




When Europe's politicians boldly said a few weeks ago what they have been repeatedly saying every year for the past three, namely that "Europe is fixed" usually just before it breaks all over again, what they meant was that the various stock markets were up. Because if they were actually referring to the European economies, Europe just broke (no pun intended) once more, with the Greek economy once again back to its "new normal" baseline state: a near complete halt as the cold of winter dissipates, and protests and strikes return. In this case, the biggest losers are the thousands of people living on various Greek islands who have now been cut off from the mainland for the 6th consecutive day. And everyone else, of course, reliant on the Greek economy actually posting an uptick one of these centuries.
From Reuters: "Greek seamen extended a strike to protest against government austerity for a further 48 hours on Sunday, meaning dozens of islands will have been cut off from the mainland for six days." They were not alone: "Farmers also briefly disrupted traffic on major motorways across Greece in the latest wave of protest over budget cuts and labor reform that is needed to satisfy international lenders." And that is just the start: "Greece's biggest labor union has called a general 24-hour strike for February 20." Happy days are back again, and with them, the warm up of the Syntagma Square riotcam, unless of course said riotcam was pledged long ago as ECB collateral for yet another loan which promptly ended up in G-Pap's or Venizelos' Swiss bank account, and is now long gone.
Caption of a ship generating zero GDP
From Reuters:
The seamen are demanding months of unpaid wages and the repeal of a draft law that weakens their union by introducing a new employment contract between shipowners and crew.

"The law wipes out the seamen's profession and all the rules underpinning it," the PNO union said.

The strike, which started on Thursday, has begun causing shortages on grocery shelves and is hindering agricultural exports to the Balkans and beyond, the Athens Central Vegetable Market Association said in a statement.

The farmers disrupted traffic with sit-ins and by distributing free rice to drivers, to protest against tax increases that form part of the country's bailout.
"We have no choice but to go on, we're on the brink of desperation," one farmer told state television NET. Greece's latest austerity package mandates lower tax refunds and fuel subsidies for farmers and increases the social security contributions they must pay.

The Greek government is holding talks with the protesters but refuses to budge on any demands that might undermine its deficit cutting efforts, a condition of bailout funds and debt relief from the European Union and International Monetary Fund.
While in the past most labor strikes have been resolved peacefully, Greece is now at a point where even one day of economic standstill has unknown consequences as the economy is already on empty. Which is why last month the country invoked rarely used emergency powers to break a strike of subway workers, serving military-style orders instructing them to return to work or face arrest. Should the same "militant" intervention be used to break up wholesale day strikes, the path to full blown social unrest, mediated by what's left of the Greek army, will be a very short one.

Merchant shipping minister Costis Mousouroulis suggested on Sunday that the government might do the same against the seamen. "We can't be shutting our ears to islanders' desperate calls," he said.

Austerity has fuelled social unrest and extremism. Police on Friday arrested two bank robbers who turned out to be suspected members of a left-wing extremist group, Conspiracy of Fire Cells, which has claimed a spate of bomb attacks across the country since 2009.

Golden Dawn, an ultra-right, anti-immigrant party which ranks third in the opinion polls, staged its biggest rally ever in Athens late on Saturday, mustering about 5,000 supporters.
Needless to say, by the time full blown civil war is raging in Greece, we expect to be able to collect not less than par for the several torn up and completely worthless Greek bonds collecting dust in our collective attick.




Needless to say, by the time full blown civil war is raging in Greece, we expect to be able to collect not less than par for the several torn up and completely worthless Greek bonds collecting dust in our collective attic.



and the lies continue from the Greek fin Min..........

Greek FinMin expects upturn as early as October, slams ex-PMs for failing to avert crisis

Greece will begin to recover from five years of recession and the repercussions of an unprecedented debt crisis as early as this October, Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras told Kathimerini during an interview in which he blamed former premiers George Papandreou and Costas Karamanlis for failing to take bold measures that could have averted the economic meltdown.
Noting that Greece has significant potential to increase its production, Stournaras said he believed the recent stabilization of the economy would allow the first signs of recovery to appear as early as October. “The gap between what we could be producing and what we are producing is higher than 25 percent,” he said, adding that he expected “a significant recovery in 2014.”
Greece is on track to produce a primary surplus this year, he added, noting that the government aims to give concessions to low-income groups. “We have agreed that 70 percent of the excess will go to social benefits or to tax cuts,” he said.
He also directed strong criticism against former Prime Minister Papandreou, who led Greece to its first international bailout, and the latter’s predecessor, Karamanlis, whom Stournaras accused of overseeing a massive increase in public spending. “That period after 2006 can only be described as a derailment,” Stournaras said, noting that state spending as a percentage of gross domestic product skyrocketed to 53.8 percent in 2009. Stournaras slammed Papandreou for ignoring Karamanlis’s belated appeal for cutbacks to state spending and for seeking to honor his pre-election promises despite the dire economic situation. “If he had taken measures immediately, we would certainly have had better terms,” Stournaras said, referring to the conditions attached to the first bailout. “We might have entered the memorandum with the terms of Portugal or Ireland.”
Questioned about the insistence of opposition SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras that the government’s austerity policy has failed, Stournaras challenged the leftist to reveal the reaction of German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble and of the International Monetary Fund to SYRIZA’s alternative proposal. “There can be no stabilization program without reducing incomes for a period of time,” Stournaras said. “There were never any magical solutions.”
ekathimerini.com , Saturday February 2, 2013 (13:49)  

and ponzi goes epic - just need to actually sell things now ......


Athens begins securitization of revenues from sell-offs

By Sotiris Nikas
The plan for the repayment of the country’s debt through the securitization of future revenues from privatizations is now being implemented, starting with the funds that Greece borrowed to complete its 11.3-billion-euro bond buyback program.
The method is expected to be used for the repayment of other debts as well, with the assets concerned being the real estate properties that are set for privatization.
Two meetings on the issue took place this week to set the plan in motion – one on the financial experts’ level and another on the technical level, with the participation of officials from the state privatization fund (TAIPED).
Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras had put the idea forward before last year’s election, to the dismay of the country’s creditors. The latest bailout agreement, however, states that Greece can issue securities on the revenues it will collect in future from selling some of its assets to pay back the 11.3 billion euros of the buyback program.
“We are now winning the argument that I had expressed in Parliament just after the election, when I met the troika’s resistance,” Stournaras told Skai TV in December.
ekathimerini.com , Friday February 1, 2013 (22:20)  

and the Oscar for best faking until they make it state goes to Greece  .....

Top jobless rate in the EU

Greece holds the record among all European Union countries in terms of jobless rates.
Eurostat figures released on Friday showed that the unemployment rate in this country stood at 26.8 percent in October 2012, with Spain coming in second with 26.1 percent.
Greece also has the worst rate in the categories of jobless men (24.1 percent), women (30.4 percent) and the under-25s (57.6 percent).
In December 2012 the EU had 25.9 million jobless people, of whom 18.7 million were in the eurozone while 1.8 million had lost their job in the euro area within the last 12 months.
Greece also ranked top in the jobless rate increase as it soared from 19.7 percent in October 2011 to 26.8 percent last October.
ekathimerini.com , Friday February 1, 2013 (22:12)  


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