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Friday, September 28, 2012

The root of Europe's riots | Ha-Joon Chang

No wonder the protesters are back. They are angry at the backdoor rewriting of the social contract

Throughout the 1980s and 90s, when many developing countries were in crisis and borrowing money from the International Monetary Fund, waves of protests in those countries became known as the "IMF riots". They were so called because they were sparked by the fund's structural adjustment programmes, which imposed austerity, privatisation and deregulation.

The IMF complained that calling these riots thus was unfair, as it had not caused the crises and was only prescribing a medicine, but this was largely self-serving. Many of the crises had actually been caused by the asset bubbles built up following IMF-recommended financial deregulation. Moreover, those rioters were not just expressing general discontent but reacting against the austerity measures that directly threatened their livelihoods, such as cuts in subsidies to basic commodities such as food and water, and cuts in already meagre welfare payments.

The IMF programme, in other words, met such resistance because its designers had forgotten that behind the numbers they were crunching were real people. These criticisms, as well as the ineffectiveness of its economic programme, became so damaging that the IMF has made a lot of changes in the past decade or so. It has become more cautious in pushing for financial deregulation and austerity programmes, renamed its structural adjustment programmes as poverty reduction programmes, and has even (marginally) increased the voting shares of the developing countries in its decision-making.

Given these recent changes in the IMF, it is ironic to see the European governments inflicting an old-IMF-style programme on their own populations. It is one thing to tell the citizens of some faraway country to go to hell but it is another to do the same to your own citizens, who are supposedly your ultimate sovereigns. Indeed, the European governments are out-IMF-ing the IMF in its austerity drive so much that now the fund itself frequently issues the warning that Europe is going too far, too fast.

The threat to livelihoods has reached such a dimension that renewed bouts of rioting are now rocking Greece, Spain and even the usually quieter Portugal. In the case of Spain, its national integrity is threatened by the separatist demand made by the Catalan nationalists, who think the austerity policy is unfairly reducing the region's autonomy.

Even if these and other European countries (for other countries have not been free of protests against austerity programmes, such as Britain's university fees riot and the protests by Italy's "recession widows") survive this social unrest through a mixture of heavy-handed policing and political delaying tactics, recent events raise a very serious question about the nature of European politics.

What has been happening in Europe – and indeed the US in a more muted and dispersed form – is nothing short of a complete rewriting of the implicit social contracts that have existed since the end of the second world war. In these contracts, renewed legitimacy was bestowed on the capitalist system, once totally discredited following the great depression. In return it provided a welfare state that guarantees minimum provision for all those burdens that most citizens have to contend with throughout their lives – childcare, education, health, unemployment, disability and old age.

Of course there is nothing sacrosanct about any of the details of these social contracts. Indeed, the contracts have been modified on the margins all the time. However, the rewriting in many European countries is an unprecedented one. It is not simply that the scope and the speed of the cuts are unusually large. It is more that the rewriting is being done through the back door.

Instead of it being explicitly cast as a rewriting of the social contract, changing people's entitlements and changing the way the society establishes its legitimacy, the dismembering of the welfare state is presented as a technocratic exercise of "balancing the books". Democracy is neutered in the process and the protests against the cuts are dismissed. The description of the externally imposed Greek and Italian governments as "technocratic" is the ultimate proof of the attempt to make the radical rewriting of the social contract more acceptable by pretending that it isn't really a political change.

The danger is not only that these austerity measures are killing the European economies but also that they threaten the very legitimacy of European democracies – not just directly by threatening the livelihoods of so many people and pushing the economy into a downward spiral, but also indirectly by undermining the legitimacy of the political system through this backdoor rewriting of the social contract. Especially if they are going to have to go through long tunnels of economic difficulties in coming years, and in the context of global shifts in economic power balance and of severe environmental challenges, European countries can ill afford to have the legitimacy of their political systems damaged in this way.


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France: no leeway for failure

François Hollande's budget – the toughest in 30 years – is ameliorative but it is hardly a radical departure.

Rigour, austerity and recession are out. Combat, exceptional measures and solidarity are in. With those costume changes, François Hollande has just delivered the toughest budget in 30 years. But he has done what he said he would do. He hit the super-rich with a 75% tax. It will only effect a symbolic number of taxpayers, about 2,000 in all, but in a country which has turned its back on bling-bling presidents, Mr Hollande is sticking to his script. Two thirds of the €30bn the French public purse has to recoup will come from tax rises – a percentage that would have Ed Balls exiting stage right – and one third from a public spending freeze.

The larger question is whether French austerity will prove any less counterproductive than the Greek, Spanish or Portuguese ones have been. The assumptions on which this budget are based are balanced on a hairpin – 0.8% growth? In combative mood, prime minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said this target was both realistic and ambitious, but it appears to be more ambitious than realistic. It is a leap in the dark, but a government has to make a plan, and – in dark times like these – there is no well-lit way to jump. As Labour assembles in Manchester, Mr Balls ought to reflect that uncertainty about the future dogs social democrats when they come to office. In these circumstances of wild flux, the single most important thing to hang on to is flexibility to respond to events. Rushing to repeat the sort of restrictive spending commitments made ahead of the 1997 election at this stage in the game would be a mistake.

Already the French government has been forced to concede that France will not be out of the red by 2017. The remaining hope that the public deficit can be reduced from its current level of 4.5% to 3% of GDP in conditions where the economy is stagnating continues to strain credibility. Even in good times, such a cut would represent a considerable heave. To achieve this, Mr Hollande would have to pull off public-sector reforms that both of his conservative predecessors, Nicolas Sarkozy and Jacques Chirac, ducked.

There remain, too, fundamental concerns about the direction of travel. The central charge against European leaders is they are attempting to counter deflation with deflationary policies. That is not just a point made by the Paul Krugmans of this world. It is now being made by the IMF. By hurting the near-term growth outlook, tighter fiscal policy could be leading to wider rather than narrower spreads over German bonds. Especially so if it involved an outright decline in the overall size of the economy. Killing the economy while raising debt will not work. Seen from this perspective, Hollande's budget is ameliorative but it is hardly a radical departure.

Borrowing at cheap rates of interest, France is petrified of another Moody's downgrade. Any jacking up of the rate to Spanish levels would push these finely balanced budget projections over a cliff. Mr Ayrault has argued that if they abandoned the 3% target, France would become Italy and Spain overnight. The black hole in Spain's banking sector was declared to be €59.3bn, which caused sighs of relief because it could have been worse . But the more essential your economy is to the euro, the better terms you can demand. A Spanish premier is always going to have a louder voice in Brussels than that of a Greek premier. If France ever needed a bailout, it could demand one on better terms.

Mr Hollande is to be applauded for sharing the burden on the people who can most afford to pay it. But he remains a hostage to fortune. With over 3 million unemployed, he has no leeway for failure. It is not his fault, but it is the legacy he has taken on. If small French companies who have been spared the pain in this budget don't start hiring, and soon, France will have increased debt and declining means to pay it.


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This is the speech Ed Miliband should make next Tuesday | Jonathan Freedland

At the Labour party conference, Miliband must lift his eyes from those gathered in the hall and address the whole country

On Tuesday, Ed Miliband will address the Labour party conference, giving his third speech as leader. It is not a make-or-break affair. Labour's poll lead is in double digits and the party is uncharacteristically united.

One shadow cabinet minister reckons that, of the three main Westminster leaders, Miliband is the only one sure to lead his party into the next election. That gives him a rare freedom on Tuesday. While Nick Clegg had to look over his shoulder at Vince Cable, and David Cameron will next week keep a permanent eye on Boris Johnson, Miliband can lift his gaze beyond the party gathered in the conference hall and address the country.

The speech is written now, already circulated to close colleagues. The last thing Miliband will want is more unsolicited advice, still less a whole new draft. Nevertheless, in the spirit of public service, this column offers a proposed text for the Labour leader. Here is the speech he could give:

"Conference, it's traditional to begin with a dig at our opponents, often in the form of a slightly wince-worthy joke. Something, perhaps, about how a famous American late-night TV show last week starred a guy called David who knows nothing about Britain or its history – and also David Letterman. Or how Andrew Mitchell's been taking Latin lessons from Boris: trouble is, he can't get past the word plebs. That kind of thing.

"Next, there usually comes a gag seeking to defuse some simmering internal tension. So here's where I gesture towards Ed Balls and say, 'We're not next-door neighbours and we're not brothers. As Labour rivalries go, that counts as an improvement.'

"But I can hear you groaning and I don't blame you. These are serious times and I'm a serious person. I couldn't look into the camera, oozing sincerity, like Nick Clegg, and I couldn't be a PR man for a rich TV company, like David Cameron. What you've heard about me is true. I'm the guy whose idea of holiday reading is a volume of political philosophy. I'm interested in ideas. And I don't apologise for that. Because if you want to know what a man with no interest in ideas looks like, look at David Cameron.

"I know that many of the people watching at home will feel as if they don't yet know me. You might have heard that my parents were Jewish refugees from the Nazis, two young people hounded out of a Europe that wanted people like them wiped out – but who found a haven right here in Britain. That history lives on inside me, even if I'm only now coming to grips with what it means for me and for the young sons Justine and I are raising.

"But there's more to my personal story than that. I came of age in the era of Thatcherism, a time defined by the slogan, 'There is no alternative'. My parents, and the procession of activists and campaigners who sat round our kitchen table, refused to accept that. They believed – and I learned – that there is always an alternative. That another world is possible.

"So when I see our economy struggling to breathe, while the government says there is only plan A – no alternative – I won't accept it. Cutting the deficit is vital, but it has to be done at the right time and in the right way or else it will make things worse. The evidence is all around us in Europe, in Greece, or in Spain: austerity squeezes the life out of an economy at the very moment it needs more oxygen.

"George Osborne makes a fetish of cutting the deficit, but the joke – the cruel joke – is that he's making the problem worse, not better. The national debt has actually gone up by 25% in two years under the coalition – and we've borrowed more this year than we did last. And it's no wonder, because only growth puts money into the national coffers. If that means short-term borrowing, so be it: after all, we're borrowing anyway. We can do it because, unlike the nations of the eurozone, we control our own currency and can borrow cheaply. And who do we have to thank for keeping us out of the euro? Gordon Brown and, yes, Ed Balls. You see, there is an alternative to plan A. Another world is possible.

"No one disputes that the deficit is a problem, one that looms over our generation. Once the economy is stable, we will have to deal with it. Strange to think there was a time when the main task of politicians was to decide how to slice up the pie, what to give away. Politics isn't like that any more. Which is why I started a debate last year about changing the economy itself.

"I spoke then about predators. Today I want to tell you that the next Labour government will have zero tolerance of those who abuse the system to feed their own greed. Those who rig the system, as in the Libor scandal, won't get a slap on the wrists. They'll go to jail. And I'll implement the Vickers proposals in full, splitting the banks, separating casino from high street – and we won't wait till 2019. We'll do it straightaway.

'But I also want to encourage the genuine producers, those who answer that crucial question: where will the jobs of the future come from? That means making the City the servant, not master, of the real economy, as well as nurturing the industries that make things people want to buy. Our labour market has become so short-term, so casualised, there's too little investment in the training and apprenticeships that take time to reap rewards. If we're going to be a high-skill economy, that has to change. And it can. Because another world is possible.

"And this is about more than the economy. For years we were told private is better than public – more efficient, more modern. Well, when it came to the crunch this summer, who secured the Olympics: was it G4S or was it the fine men and women of the British military? When the private sector failed, Private Smith stepped in.

"London 2012 showed us that another Britain is possible: a place that is proud, varied, hopeful and which knows that when we come together – athletes, volunteers and, yes, government – there is no limit to what we can achieve. This is the Britain I dream of, a country that shows itself – and everyone else – that there is an alternative. That another world is possible."

Twitter @j_ freedland


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Spain, Greece ETFs Backpedal On Protests


Globe and Mail

Spain, Greece ETFs Backpedal On Protests
Seeking Alpha
The unresolved eurozone debt crisis has been compounded by the violent protests this week in Greece and Spain, although ETFs tracking the two countries rebounded somewhat Thursday after sliding earlier in the week. "Protests against austerity turned ...
Spain, Greece launch austerity plans to secure aidIron Mountain Daily News
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Greek police send crime victims to neo-Nazi 'protectors'

Far-right Golden Dawn party filling vacuum for those neglected by state after MPs elected to fight 'immigrant scum'

Greece's far-right Golden Dawn party is increasingly assuming the role of law enforcement officers on the streets of the bankrupt country, with mounting evidence that Athenians are being openly directed by police to seek help from the neo-Nazi group, analysts, activists and lawyers say.

In return, a growing number of Greek crime victims have come to see the party, whose symbol bears an uncanny resemblance to the swastika, as a "protector".

One victim of crime, an eloquent US-trained civil servant, told the Guardian of her family's shock at being referred to the party when her mother recently called the police following an incident involving Albanian immigrants in their downtown apartment block.

"They immediately said if it's an issue with immigrants go to Golden Dawn," said the 38-year-old, who fearing for her job and safety, spoke only on condition of anonymity. "We don't condone Golden Dawn but there is an acute social problem that has come with the breakdown of feeling of security among lower and middle class people in the urban centre," she told the Guardian. "If the police and official mechanism can't deliver and there is no recourse to justice, then you have to turn to other maverick solutions."

Other Greeks with similar experiences said the far-rightists, catapulted into parliament on a ticket of tackling "immigrant scum" were simply doing the job of a defunct state that had left a growing number feeling overwhelmed by a "sense of powerlessness". "Nature hates vacuums and Golden Dawn is just filling a vacuum that no other party is addressing," one woman lamented. "It gives 'little people' a sense that they can survive, that they are safe in their own homes."

Far from being tamed, parliamentary legitimacy appears only to have emboldened the extremists. In recent weeks racially-motivated attacks have proliferated. Immigrants have spoken of their fear of roaming the streets at night following a spate of attacks by black-clad men on motorbikes. Street vendors from Africa and Asia have also been targeted.

"For a lot of people in poorer neighbourhoods we are liberators," crowed Yiannis Lagos, one of 18 MPs from the stridently patriot "popular nationalist movement" to enter the 300-seat house in June. "The state does nothing," he told a TV chat show, adding that Golden Dawn was the only party that was helping Greeks, hit by record levels of poverty and unemployment, on the ground. Through an expansive social outreach programme, which also includes providing services to the elderly in crime-ridden areas, the group regularly distributes food and clothes parcels to the needy.

But the hand-outs come at a price: allegiance to Golden Dawn. "A friend who was being seriously harassed by her husband and was referred to the party by the police very soon found herself giving it clothes and food in return," said a Greek teacher, who, citing the worsening environment enveloping the country, again spoke only on condition of anonymity. "She's a liberal and certainly no racist and is disgusted by what she has had to do."

The strategy, however, appears to be paying off. On the back of widespread anger over biting austerity measures that have also hit the poorest hardest, the popularity of the far-rightists has grown dramatically with polls indicating a surge in support for the party.

One survey last week showed a near doubling in the number of people voicing "positive opinions" about Golden Dawn, up from 12% in May to 22%. The popularity of Nikos Michaloliakos, the party's rabble-rousing leader had shot up by 8 points, much more than any other party leader.

Paschos Mandravelis, a prominent political analyst, attributed the rise in part to the symbiotic relationship between the police and Golden Dawn. "Greeks haven't turned extremist overnight. A lot of the party's backing comes from the police, young recruits who are a-political and know nothing about the Nazis or Hitler," he said. "For them, Golden Dawn supporters are their only allies on the frontline when there are clashes between riot police and leftists."

Riding the wave, the party has taken steps to set up branches among diaspora Greek communities abroad, opening an office in New York last week. Others are expected to open in Australia and Canada. Cadres say they are seeing particular momentum in support from women.

With Greeks becoming ever more radicalised, the conservative-led government has also clamped down on illegal immigration, detaining thousands in camps and increasing patrols along the country's land and sea frontier with Turkey.

But in an environment of ever increasing hate speech and mounting tensions, the party's heavy-handedness is also causing divisions. A threat by Golden Dawn to conduct raids against vendors attending an annual fair in the town of Arta this weekend has caused uproar.

"They say they have received complaints about immigrant vendors from shop owners here but that is simply untrue," said socialist mayor Yiannis Papalexis. "Extra police have been sent down from Athens and if they come they will be met by leftists who have said they will beat them up with clubs. I worry for the stability of my country."

Seated in her office beneath the Acropolis, Anna Diamantopoulou, a former EU commissioner, shakes her head in disbelief. Despair, she says, has brought Greece to a dangerous place.

"I never imagined that something like Golden Dawn would happen here, that Greeks could vote for such people," she sighed. "This policy they have of giving food only to the Greeks and blood only to the Greeks. The whole package is terrifying. This is a party based on hate of 'the other'. Now 'the other' is immigrants, but who will 'the other' be tomorrow?"


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Greek mall deal could kickstart privatisations


Greek mall deal could kickstart privatisations
Reuters
ATHENS, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Greece picked real estate firm Lamda to manage a shopping mall that served as a broadcasting centre during the Athens 2004 Olympics, the country's privatisation agency said on Friday. Greece is scrambling to jump start its ...

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France unveils 'harshest budget in 30 years'

Hollande's 2013 budget asks for 'unprecedented effort' to find €36.9bn in savings and includes the 75% supertax on the rich

To the dismay of a swath of French bankers, business leaders and the wealthy, President François Hollande has remained true to his word and unveiled €20bn (£16bn) in new taxes, including a 75% "supertax" band that will hit the rich.

In what Hollande has described as France's harshest budget in 30 years, business and personal taxpayers were asked on Friday to make an "unprecedented effort" to slash the country's public spending deficit.

However, the Socialist government sidestepped swingeing cuts in public spending, including pensions and state salaries, in its 2013 budget, which aims to find €36.9bn in savings.

It was also forced to concede that it could not keep its pledge to get the country out of the red by 2017.

The budget adopted by the government was a delicate balancing act in which the president sought to reassure investors and the financial markets, while simultaneously hiking taxes on large businesses and high-earners.

However, it commits the ruling Socialists to an austerity programme that will be unpopular with those on the left wing of the party, at a time when unemployment is rising and France's economy teeters on the brink of recession.

Hollande and his prime minister, Jean-Marc Ayrault, had both stressed in the runup to what they described as a "combat" budget their aim to reduce France's public deficit to 3% of GDP by 2013, in line with its EU commitments. The deficit is currently hovering at around 4.5% of GDP for this year.

The budget aims to raise two-thirds of the £36.9bn savings with extra taxes split evenly between households and large companies, plus more than €10bn in public spending cuts. The burden would be shared more equitably between taxes and spending cuts at a rate of 50-50 from 2014, the government promised.

The flagship measure, from a public perspective, was the announcement of a new 75% tax rate on anyone earning above €1m a year. This is expected to hit only 2,000 taxpayers. A new 45% income tax band is to be introduced for those earning over €150,000 a year.

Business leaders, including L'Oréal boss Jean-Paul Agon, have criticised the "supertax", claiming that it would prevent France from attracting the cream of executives and drive the wealthy into tax exile.

On Friday, France's opposition UMP party reacted to the budget with dismay.

Former agriculture minister Bruno Le Maire said he was "worried and disappointed", adding: "France is going to the wall."

On Europe 1 radio he added: "None of the solutions announced will get the country back on its feet, fight unemployment or create jobs."

Marine Le Pen, president of France's far-right Front National, described the budget as "absurd hyper-austerity".

"This budget puts France on the same road as Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain," she said.

François Rebsamen, president of the Socialist party group in the Sénat – the upper house of parliament – described the budget as "constructive".

"The battle to put our country back on its feet, for employment, for the return of growth and spending power, has started and the 2013 budget, which is fair, rigorous and constructive, will be a decisive factor in winning it," he said.

"Efforts have been asked of the wealthiest while the middle and working classes are spared. The tax burden on companies has been rebalanced in favour of small and medium enterprises, and therefore in favour of competitiveness," he said.

Ayrault went on television on Thursday to promise that the budget deficit target of 3% – a pillar of Hollande's presidential campaign earlier this year – would be met. He insisted France had to avoid the escalating borrowing costs that have torpedoed the economies of other eurozone countries.

"If we abandon this goal, then straight away the rates will rise and we will find ourselves in the same situation as Italy and Spain. I do not want that," he said. "We cannot continue with the debt and the deficits that we have now."

The government fears that any sign it is not addressing its inflated deficit might see the financial markets turn on France, the eurozone's second biggest economy.

However, Ayrault admitted that France would not balance its books by 2017, when Hollande's term in office ends, but would have a public deficit of around 0.3% of GDP.

Ayrault also confirmed he was expecting growth of 0.8% for 2013, which economists say is too optimistic. The PM said the figure was "realistic" and "attainable". The government is then expecting 2% growth every year between 2014 and 2017.

Just four months into his five-year term, Hollande is under fire from all sides.

As well as the grumbling from business leaders, unemployment that topped the symbolic 3 million in August, and tumbling popularity in the opinion polls, the president is facing revolt from traditional allies in the unions and leftwing groups that are threatening strikes if the budget is too austere.

A demonstration is planned for Sunday against the European Union budget treaty, which imposes strict deficit limits.

The French finance minister, Pierre Moscovici, said getting the public deficit down to 3% was "vital for the credibility of the country".

"We are committed to it and we will meet it," he said.

However, Eric Heyer of the Economic Conjuncture Observatory, was sceptical: "It has never been done before," he told French journalists.

Elie Cohen, director of research at the CNRS thinktank, added: "A 1.5% reduction of the deficit represents a considerable effort at the best of times. In a period of zero growth it would be exceptional."

Ayrault has claimed that only 10% of French taxpayers will pay more as a result of the 2013 budget, but analysts estimate the new taxes mean 4.1m households will pay more, and 8.5m will pay less.

The prime minister added that the increased taxes on businesses would not hit small and medium-sized companies crucial for job creation.

"The effort we are demanding from our biggest companies is reasonable and fair. Not only have we spared small companies, we are going to help them create the jobs the country needs," he said.


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Romney: Under Obama, US on Road to Greece


Wall Street Journal (blog)

Romney: Under Obama, US on Road to Greece
Wall Street Journal (blog)
WASHINGTON – Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said in a new radio interview the U.S. economy would show little improvement and could get worse in the next two years if President Barack Obama were re-elected. Mr. Romney, speaking to ...

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Greece Power Workers Call Rotating Strikes


Greece Power Workers Call Rotating Strikes
Wall Street Journal
Greece Power Workers Call Rotating Strikes. Article. Email; Printer Friendly; Share: facebook ↓ More. StumbleUpon; LinkedIn; Twitter; Fark; Reddit; del.icio.us; MySpace. smaller Text larger. By Nektaria Stamouli. ATHENS--Greek power workers Friday ...

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One certain forecast in U.S. poll dispute: more acrimony ahead


The Guardian

One certain forecast in U.S. poll dispute: more acrimony ahead
Chicago Tribune
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - It has become the new battle cry for Republicans: All the polls showing Mitt Romney trailing by big margins are just wrong because pollsters are interviewing too many Democrats. Surveys showing President Barack Obama leading ...
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Tsipras meets with European Parliament President in Brussels

Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras was received by European Parliament President Martin Schulz in Brussels on Thursday.

The meeting took place in a good climate, with Schulz telling Tsipras “as you can see I welcome you as a prime minister”.

In statements made after the meeting, the European Parliament president underlined the need to restore faith in the Greek economy.

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Greece Agrees to New Cuts


Daily Beast

Greece Agrees to New Cuts
Daily Beast
The country's coalition government agreed Thursday to extremely unpopular new austerity measures including $15 billion in budget cuts and $2.6 billion in taxes, comprising 6 percent of Greece's GDP. The government hopes this will be enough to wrangle ...


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Greek power workers call 48-hour strikes against austerity measures


Greek power workers call 48-hour strikes against austerity measures
Chicago Tribune
Greek power workers call 48-hour strikes against austerity measures. Email · print. Reuters. 6:02 a.m. CDT, September 28, 2012. ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece's electricity workers said on Friday they will start rolling 48-hour strikes as early as next week ...

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Greece's Coalition Partners Reach 'Basic Agreement' On Austerity


The West Australian

Greece's Coalition Partners Reach 'Basic Agreement' On Austerity
RTT News
(RTTNews) - The leaders of the three political parties in Greece's ruling coalition have reached a tentative agreement on a new EUR 11.5 billion ($17.4 billion) package of spending cuts and tax increases demanded by international creditors in exchange ...
Greece: Latest austerity measures cut top rate of taxDigitalJournal.com
Greece Govt Coalition Agrees In Principle On New Deficit CutsMNI News

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Greece, Spain Seek Further Austerity Steps


Voice of America

Greece, Spain Seek Further Austerity Steps
Voice of America
After weeks of negotiation, Greece's three-party coalition government said Thursday it has reached agreement on a $15-billion plan for more pension and salary cuts and raising the retirement age for workers from 65 to 67. Greece's international lenders ...


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Greece OKs austerity plan to receive aid




Political parties supporting the Greek coalition government on Thursday reached a "basic agreement" on a new round of harsh austerity measures demanded by its foreign lenders in exchange for emergency loans, following weeks of negotiations.

For weeks, Venizelos and Kouvelis had been in disagreement with the prime minister over the mass layoff of public sector workers, and proposed cuts to pensions.


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As Spain sinks, many in Catalonia want out


Economic Times

As Spain sinks, many in Catalonia want out
USA TODAY
BARCELONA, Spain -- This historic region on the Mediterranean -- a center of European industrial design and tourism -- has special status as an autonomous district of Spain known as Catalonia. And as financial problems mount for Spain, many here want ...
Spain's Catalonia Plans Vote on Self-DeterminationABC News
Spain announces cutbacks, tax increasesLos Angeles Times
Asia Stocks Up After Spain Pledges To Cut SpendingNPR
New York Times
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Greek Coalition Partners Strike Deal

Greece's coalition partners reached a deal on a multibillion-euro austerity plan demanded by international creditors in return for aid to the cash-strapped country.

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Spain, Greece outline new budget cuts, tax hikes

The latest round of belt-tightening comes as economies across Europe get weaker and public resentment toward austerity grows stronger



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