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The Politicians Who Warned Greece—but Were Ignored

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Matina Stevis provides this exceptional account of 3 Greek leaders who fought hard for reforms to put Greece in the right direction for euro currency membership responsibilities, and lost. They tell Stevis they were savagely attacked in the media, by labor unions, and in their own party, so that the fight came at a high personal cost. The 3 politicians now mentioned inside Greece as having done the most to ensure euro currency responsibilities were taken seriously are- Alekos Papadopoulos, who as finance minister fought with Pasok party premier Simitis in 2002 about the dangers of cheap credit coming with the euro currency, Tassos Giannitsis who as labor minister was driven out of Pasok for proposing pension reforms in 2001, and Stefanos Manos who was driven out of New Democracy Party in 1998 after warning of risks in the economy from wasteful spending, including mismanagement of railways, and proposing changes. As Greece commits to a new program under the Syriza left government as a matter of "national responsibility," with reforms to pensions, fixing tax evasion to ensure the tax burden is evenly distributed, reduced military spending, and changes in other areas, the questions in the EU about Greece are about the degree of commitment to changes. In an intervew with WSJ's Bret Stephens Tsipras is candid about the situation when he says the country on its current course would build up the debt all over again, if the debt were to be written off. Problems Tsipras cited in that interview- bribery in health care, tax evasion, burden of taxes on the middle class and honest citizens, large inefficient bureaucracy. Yet 2 years after that intervew in the WSJ, Jan. 28, 2013, Tsipras headed a Syriza government that had no proposals on tackling tax evasion, aggravating the problem of moral hazard seen by the Europeans and the IMF under Lagarde. Stefanos Manos writes in the foreword to his book that its incomprehensible how the public good is ignored by so many people who seek only individual gain.

Greek leaders who fought for pension reform, tax reform and financial prudence inside the Pasok and New Democracy parties and lost

07/11/2015

Matina Stevis provides this exceptional account of Greek leaders within the ruling centre left Pasok and centre right New Democracy political parties who fought hard for putting the country on sound financial footing realizing the obligations of the euro currency membership. These leaders tell her they were savagely attacked in the media, by labor unions, and within their party, and the fight came at a personal cost. The 3 leaders whose names now come up in Greece- Alekos Papadopoulos, a finance minister in the Pasok government in 2002, Tassos Giannitsis who proposed pension reforms as labor minister in the Pasok government in 2001, Stefanos Manos, a politician in the New Democracy party in 1998.

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The Politicians Who Warned Greece—but Were Ignored

Wall Street Journal 07/11/2015

Greek Shipping Industry Frets Over Higher Taxes

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