Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

19 March 2010

Greek Prime Minister to MEPs: time to end "opportunistic speculation"


The measures taken by Greece reflect its commitment to protect the stability of the common European currency, said Papandreou. But Europe must recognise that the measures put in place, and those still to come, will need time to take effect.

Addressing a public hearing on European economic governance and EU tools for economic and social recovery, the Greek Prime Minister explained that Greece, in the throes of an "acute crisis", was introducing the "most difficult measures since World War II to put our house in order".  Despite this, Greece was not asking the EU for help, pointed out CRIS chair Wolf Klinz (ALDE, DE), who referred to the EU Finance Ministers' decision last Tuesday to back the "very challenging austerity measures" put forward by Athens.
"We are not looking for a scapegoat nor asking for help to live from the wealth of others but what we do need is strong political support to make all these reforms and to make sure we will not have to pay more than is necessary," said Mr Papandreou. He added that Greece needed "to be able to borrow at rates which are normal". Calling for an end to "opportunistic speculation", he also warned that if the Greek government kept borrowing at such high interest rates, it would not be able to sustain the deficit reduction.
"We are really shocked that those who had to be bailed out with taxpayers' money used the first opportunity to speculate against the euro to make a profit," said Wolf Klinz to wide applause. "We need more Europe rather than less Europe," stressed Papandreou. The time had come "to put the loaded gun on the table", to make sure the markets would respond positively. In this context, Greece could provide an opportunity to deal with the issue of speculation in the EU and also at global level. Agreeing with a reported statement by Dominique Strauss-Kahn during his visit to the European Parliament the previous day, Mr Papandreou insisted "we must not lose the opportunity to fix the global financial system".
All of the measures Greece had taken reflected its commitment to protect the stability of the common European currency, said the Prime Minister. But Europe must recognise that the measures put in place, and those still to come, will need  time to take effect. "Change cannot be executed as swiftly as credit default swaps," said Mr Papandreou.
 
Changes needed in EU policy?

Among MEPs who spoke, Theodoros Skylakakis (EPP, EL) and Pascal Canfin (Greens/EFA, FR) asked about reforms to the Stability and Growth Pact and whether it should be made stricter or more flexible. Mr Papandreou replied that the EU should look at the "institutions which are missing in this project". He urged "more coordination and supervision" to ensure that countries with problems also received support, not just punishment. Otherwise there would be a failure not only of the country concerned but of the system as a whole.
"We all say that there are plenty of instruments but nobody respects them because there is nobody at the helm" of the EU, said CRIS rapporteur Pervenche Berès (S&D, FR), who believed the measures put forward by Greece "merit admiration".
 
Next steps
The experts' input will feed into further discussion among MEPs and the report by Special Committee rapporteur Pervenche Berès. The draft report is to be presented on 17 May, with the deadline for amendments set for 1 June. The vote on the report in committee is scheduled for 13 July, with a plenary vote to follow in September


© European Parliament


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment