Steps taken to fight Greece’s debt crisis are starting to take hold, the country’s prime minister said on Friday in an attempt to ease international concern about its fate.
After accumulating massive public debt and overspending, the Mediterranean state avoided a default last month through the first installment of a 110 billion euro (US$132.8 billion) rescue package from its 15 euro currency partners and the IMF.
“Today is the first time when I can look to the future with more optimism,” Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou told members of the Institute for International Finance in Austria’s capital.
“We have taken difficult decisions, tough but necessary decisions, and we are now witnessing the first signs that we are turning the corner,” he said.
In the first five months of the year, the deficit was down 40 percent compared to the same period last year, he told the global association of bankers. While revenues are up, expenditures have been severely curtailed, he added.
“We are still on the very start of our three-year economic program, yet we are very far from our initial point eight months ago,” he said, adding his goal was a “complete reorientation” of the Greek economy.
Papandreou also pledged to repay emergency financing from abroad.
“This — let me stress again — is no free money,” he said. “It is loans to be paid back with substantial interest and it is a package to support change in Greece — not to return to negative practices.”
Addressing recent social, and at times violent, unrest over harsh austerity measures, Papandreou said Greeks wanted a turnaround.
Scrutiny by uninformed analysts, sensationalist journalists and others was undermining Greece’s efforts to restore confidence in its economy, he added.
“We are asking for the necessary respect and calm so that we can do our work under the best of conditions — when our citizens are not terrorized every single day with rumors about losing their money and returning to the drachma [currency] or being expelled from the EU,” Papandreou said.
“This is obviously nonsense,” he said.
Addressing his plunging popularity, Papandreou reiterated: “I do not care if this is my only term as prime minister. I have done what I thought was necessary to save Greece from disaster.”
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