(AP) Greek euro exit would halve incomes, report warns
By DEREK GATOPOULOS and NICHOLAS PAPHITIS
Associated Press
ATHENS, Greece
An exit from the euro would see Greeks lose more than half their annual income and prompt a dramatic rise in unemployment and inflation, a report from the country’s largest bank has warned.
The National Bank of Greece study was published Tuesday as Greece heads to new general elections on June 17, amid Europe-wide concern of broader financial turmoil if Greece’s place in the single currency is threatened by a victory for an anti-austerity party.
Amid global concern over the euro, a senior U.S. Treasury official was in Athens on Tuesday to start a round of European consultations. Lael Brainard, a Treasury Undersecretary for International Affairs, met top Greek finance officials and is due to travel on to Frankfurt, Germany, and Madrid, Spain for more talks.
Debt-crippled Greece has been kept afloat by huge international rescue loans, granted on condition of harsh cutbacks and reforms that slashed living standards that have driven the country into political stalemate.
Political parties failed to form a coalition government after May 6 elections, triggering another contest between the pro-bailout New Democracy conservatives and left-wing Syriza party that has promised to cancel the terms of the country’s rescue loan agreements.
The bank report also warned that if Greece did exit the euro, unemployment would rise to 34 percent while inflation would hit 30 percent and then higher. Unemployment in Greece currently stands at around 22 percent while inflation is 2 percent.
However, news that New Democracy had taken a slight lead in the weekend opinion polls sent shares on the Athens Stock Exchange up by 6.9 percent on Monday and a further 1.9 percent on Tuesday.
He said the next government would face “a very challenging fiscal austerity agenda.”
But he added: “It is likely that a new government will be able to get some concessions on the pace of implementing the agenda.”
The country’s caretaker government, meanwhile, is battling a sudden slide in state revenues and said it will do all it can to ensure the state does not run out of cash amid the protracted political turmoil.
He did not comment on a warning by former prime minister Lucas Papademos _ leaked to Sunday’s To Vima newspaper _ that Greece risked running out of funds just after the election.