Greece’s proposals to lenders: Full text | News | ekathimerini.com

Read Greece‘s full proposals to lenders, in English, published via Greece’s ekathimerini newspaper. Check it out!

Greece’s proposals to lenders: Full text | News | ekathimerini.com.

I’m not an expert but to me these proposals are detailed and outline very serious reforms.

Now we need to see what creditors put on the table to try to reach a deal this weekend. There has to be a concession which the Greek prime minister can show to the people of Greece, otherwise the reforms will never be delivered.

The week has seen enormous diplomatic pressure on Germany, from France, the US and Italy.

Thoughts?

One response

  1. Like Dr Alf, I have read the full text of the Greek proposals and agree that they look serious.
    Raising corporation tax is a counterproductive measure however, which will do nothing to encourage new business setup in Greece or foreign inward investment.

    Being a practical man, I think that the actions of Greek politicians and the people are far more important than any proposals.

    Over the years, I have seen countless marketing plans, sales optimization plans, business plans and transformational blueprints but what distinguished the leaders of the pack was the intent and motivation of those who had to make it happen. Leopards do not change their spots and Damascene conversions are rare.

    Like my wise late father-in-law, who came from St Louis, Missouri, I want to see the “whites of Tsipras’s eyes” and a bit of messianic fervor from the Greek people, before I am ready to believe a word they say.

    Saturday meeting of Eurogroup finance ministers echoes these sentiments. Even if the proposals from Greece are accepted, there are concerns about credibility and risk of delivery. The Prime Minister of Greece is a former student Communist leader and it is hard to see conservatives in Finland and Germany being comfortable with the latest offer on the table. If it were a private or a corporate situation, creditors would be looking for collaterol and hard guarantees.

    Let’s see whether Europe political elite can fudge a deal today (Sunday).

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: