Creditors, Greeks bracing for budget

Tsipras must balance cuts with needs

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras will unveil his government's policy plans for its new term in office today, including a draft budget for 2016, as he tries to win back the trust of the country's European partners.

In a three-day-long parliamentary debate set to conclude with a vote of confidence on Wednesday, the 41-year-old leader will seek to strike a balance between complying with creditors' demands and fulfilling his election-campaign promises for a "parallel program" to alleviate the impact of austerity. European leaders are pushing Greece for deep spending cuts and economic overhauls.

"Comrades, we have an important and difficult task ahead: to implement the agreement of July 12," Tsipras told lawmakers of his Syriza party on Saturday, referring to the bailout deal he struck in the summer. "At the same time, we have to negotiate on the issues that are still open, which we fought to keep open, to hold the ground we gained."

Tsipras is trying to contain the economic fallout from the six months of negotiating with creditors that preceded the July deal. The government's priority is restoring collective bargaining in labor markets and tackling the issue of non-performing loans while protecting primary residences from foreclosures, he told lawmakers on Saturday.

On Sunday, Greece's new Parliament chose Syriza deputy Nikos Voutsis as its speaker.

Voutsis got 181 votes from 297 voting lawmakers.

The 64-year-old Voutsis succeeds 38-year-old Zoe Konstantopoulou, who left Syriza in August after Tsipras accepted the third bailout deal for heavily indebted Greece. She ran with the Syriza dissidents of Popular Unity, which failed to enter Parliament.

European authorities, meanwhile, are pushing Greece to implement 48 "milestones" by mid-October in order to secure the next tranche from its bailout, according to a document obtained by Bloomberg News on Friday. They include amending laws on household insolvency and early retirement in the public sector.

Circulated among the so-called Euro Working Group of finance ministry officials, the milestones include bills that parliament passed in August but that haven't gotten the ministerial and presidential decrees needed for full implementation.

Tsipras said there's still room for negotiation with creditors on "equivalent measures" for some parts of the austerity program, including opening up the electricity market and a new round of pension cuts. Both are among the dozens of conditions included in Greece's bailout agreement with euro area member states for unlocking emergency loans.

At stake if Greece doesn't comply and its creditors freeze disbursements is the country's ability to service its debt and recapitalize its battered financial system before the end of the year. Greek bonds were among the worst-performing of all sovereign securities tracked by Bloomberg's World Bond Indexes for the past year.

Also coming by the end of October is completion of a balance-sheet review of Greek banks being conducted under the auspices of the European Central Bank, European Commissioner for Economic and Financial Affairs Pierre Moscovici told Proto Thema newspaper in an interview Sunday. Greek bank shares hit a record low Thursday, reducing the value of the state's stake in Greece's four biggest lenders to $2.1 billion Friday from about $17.5 billion a year ago.

"We need new measures, which will include additional steps for the stabilization of public finances, and front-loaded reform of the banking sector," Moscovici said.

This week's policy platform debate and vote of confidence are standard procedure in Greek parliament following an election recess. Tsipras formed a coalition government with the nationalist Independent Greeks party after his victory in a snap vote held Sept. 20.

Information for this article was contributed by The Associated Press.

A Section on 10/05/2015

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