Greek unions staged a nationwide strike yesterday, grounding flights, shutting schools and crippling public services in a show of strength against government austerity measures aimed at pulling the debt-ridden country out of a financial crisis.
In the first general strike since the center-left government’s election in October, all flights to and from Greek airports were canceled, while trains and ferries were also idle. Commuters in Athens were left without most forms of public transport. Public schools, tax offices and municipal offices were closed, while public hospitals were using emergency staff.
Journalists were also holding a 24-hour strike, and two separate demonstrations were planned for central Athens.
PHOTO: AFP
The country’s two largest umbrella labor groups, the private sector GSEE and public sector ADEDY, fiercely oppose a wave of belt-tightening measures announced over the past weeks to reduce the bloated budget deficit from 12.7 percent of GDP to 8.7 percent this year.
“If all these measures are enforced, unemployment will skyrocket. Our country will enter a massive recession and unemployment will reach a Europe-wide record,” GSEE spokesman Stathis Anestis said. “This will be tragic because it will provoke social [unrest] and clashes.”
Greek unemployment hit a five-year high of 10.6 percent in November, up from 9.8 percent in October. The country’s woes have affected confidence in the euro as a common currency and increased the country’s borrowing costs.
The governing Socialists have frozen civil service wages and hiring, while cutting bonuses, hiking consumer taxes and raising retirement ages.
Greek borrowing rates nevertheless remained high yesterday, reflecting market worries of a default. Spreads on government bonds over their German equivalent widened to 340.2 basis points after Fitch ratings agency on Tuesday downgraded ratings on four Greek banks.
Shares on the Athens Stock Exchange were also 0.59 percent lower in late morning trading.
Greece is facing a March 16 deadline from the EU to show signs of fiscal improvement and is under pressure to take additional measures. These could include an increase in value added tax, currently at 19 percent, and further civil service bonus cuts.
Greece’s central bank governor George Provopoulos said in a speech on Tuesday that Greece’s crisis heightened a pressing need for major economic reforms.
“The crisis could present an opportunity to carry out necessary reforms — and not just have a debate about them — given that not implementing these reforms would have a great price,” he said.
Yesterday’s strike was to be a crucial test of support for the unions, with polls showing strong support for the government’s plan. A poll on Sunday in the Ethnos newspaper showed some 57.6 percent of Greeks believe measures taken so far are “in the right direction,” while 75.8 percent said unions should show restraint until the end of the crisis.
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