Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Greece Secures Austerity Vote

Wall Street Journal
June 29, 2011

Greece's parliament has passed a controversial five-year austerity plan that the country has promised its international creditors.

Passage of the additional €28.4 billion ($40.81 billion) in spending cuts and new taxes has been set as a condition for another international bailout to keep Greece from defaulting on its debt.

The outcome is a relief for Prime Minister George Papandreou, who has been working hard to ensure that wavering deputies from his own party voted with their party. "We have to do anything necessary to avoid the country collapsing," Papandreou said just before the voting.

He said that failure to approve the measures would cause the country to run out of money. He also warned that there was "no plan B" if the measures did not pass and that Greece would be "sold off" by its international creditors.

Greece faces another critical test Thursday, when parliament will hold an article-by-article vote on the legislation implementing the austerity plan and a promised €50 billion privatization program. But with the overall outlines of the austerity plan expected to pass Wednesday, the vote on the implementing legislation is expected to be a formality.

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