Statement by the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund on the Third Review Mission to Greece
Staff teams from the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund visited Athens from 27 January to 11 February for the third review of the government’s economic programme, which is being supported by a EUR 80 billion loan from euro area countries and a EUR 30 billion Stand-By Arrangement with the Fund.
The objectives underpinning the programme are to restore fiscal sustainability, safeguard financial sector stability and boost competitiveness in order to create the conditions for sustained growth and employment. Maintaining social fairness in shouldering the burden of adjustment in the programme also remains of paramount concern, and this will continue to guide the direction of policies in the period ahead.
Our overall assessment is that the programme has made further progress towards achieving its objectives. While there have been delays in some areas, the underlying fiscal and broader reforms necessary to deliver the programme’s medium-term objectives are being put in place. However, major reforms still need to be designed and implemented in order to build a critical mass necessary to secure fiscal sustainability and economic recovery.
Regarding the outlook, the recession has to date been close to what was anticipated. Underlying inflation has remained low in the face of rising commodity prices. Downward movement of unit labour costs should support gains in competitiveness. Encouragingly, exports have performed well recently. We continue to expect the economy to stabilise in late 2011.
In the fiscal area, against the sharp macro headwinds, the authorities delivered a fiscal adjustment of 6% of GDP in 2010, reducing the deficit to about 9.5% of GDP. This is an impressive achievement, but some tensions were evident in the implementation of the budget, in particular shortfalls in revenue collections and problems with spending control. The programme has been designed to address these problems, and work is progressing.
The government has begun to specify a medium-term budget strategy, which will define time-bound actions to realise the full fiscal adjustment through to 2014. The reforms are complex and cover taxation, health, public employment and state enterprise reforms, among other issues. The government is appropriately allowing time for consultation with social partners before moving beyond the design phase to begin implementation. The government’s full commitment to this complicated process of institutional change, not least its determination to resist vested interests, will be critical to success.
Concerning financing, the government is continuing to work towards securing a gradual return to bond markets at affordable interest rates. Strong programme implementation, with financial support from the international community, remains key to achieving this. It is equally important that the government notably scales up its privatisation programme and, more generally, realises better returns from its extensive portfolio of assets. Work is proceeding to establish a comprehensive inventory of the government’s real estate assets, and to define a phased action plan.
As to the financial sector, tight liquidity and rising non-performing loans are putting strains on the banking system and credit is contracting. Encouragingly, private banks have recently enjoyed some success in raising capital. It is essential that the government makes progress in addressing the stability and efficiency of the banks under its control. The Eurosystem has been a key source of liquidity support for the system, and this is allowing banks to gradually move towards a sustainable medium-term funding model. The Financial Stability Fund is available to provide support to banks in the system, if needed.
Structural reforms are making progress. Legislation covering aspects of the labour market, the liberalisation of closed professions, healthcare reform, licensing and the competition authority has either already been passed, or soon will be. The authorities’ focus must now be on implementing these laws in order to ensure that the new frameworks are effective as soon as possible. To secure economic recovery, early progress on structural reforms remains critical. The government must ensure that reforms are sufficiently ambitious and comprehensive to tackle the deep-seated structural challenges facing Greece. The next steps will focus on, among other things, reviving the tourist industry, removing administrative barriers to exports and strengthening public procurement.
Next Steps. Approval of the conclusion of the third review will allow the disbursement of EUR 15 billion (EUR 10.9 billion by the euro area countries, and EUR 4.1 billion by the IMF). The mission for the next programme review is scheduled for May 2011.
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