PM calls for more time for reform
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras has called for an extension to
Greece’s fiscal adjustment period in an interview with the Washington
Post in which he stressed the government’s determination to keep the
country solvent and in the eurozone and his conviction that his
coalition will manage to push a new austerity package through
Parliament.
“We are asking for enough time,” he said, referring to
the implementation of the multi-billion-euro austerity package. “Two
years, up until 2014, has been accepted by the troika. We are talking
about an extension to 2016.”
The premier’s comments came after
International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde indicated that an
extension could be granted, an option that European Parliament President
Martin Schulz supported in an interview with Sunday’s Kathimerini. “If
the troika report is good, then Greece should get the extra time it is
asking for,” Schulz said.
Samaras told the Washington Post his
government would do what it takes. “Our determination is a given. It is
11.7 billion euros in expenditure cuts,” he said. Samaras said the
package would be approved. “It will pass Parliament because we all
realize the No. 1 prerequisite for our future is to stay in the
eurozone,” he said. The premier, who held meetings with European
officials in recent weeks, claimed the outlook toward Greece has
improved. “If you look at the signals a month ago and then look at them
recently, they are very different,” he said.
He also voiced
concern about the impact of austerity on society, saying, “We have to
get light at the end of the tunnel,” and an aggravation of the country’s
problem with illegal immigration. “I wake up every morning and say,
‘Has anything happened in Syria today?’ If something happens in Syria,
thousands of people would be flowing into Greece.” |
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