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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

REFILE-Greece names new betting firm chief


REFILE-Greece names new betting firm chief
Reuters
ATHENS, July 31 (Reuters) - Greece has appointed economist Konstantinos Louropoulos as president and chief executive of state-controlled betting firm OPAP to replace Yannis Spanoudakis, the finance ministry said on Tuesday. Top management changes ...

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Greek coalition chiefs to hold new austerity talks


euronews

Greek coalition chiefs to hold new austerity talks
Businessweek
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — The heads of the three parties in Greece's new coalition government are to meet again Wednesday to try and agree on further austerity cuts strenuously demanded by the country's bailout creditors. Despite two meetings in less than ...
The need to hold Greek feet to the fireMarketWatch

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Greek coalition govt leaders will meet again Wednesday after failure to agree ...


Business Recorder

Greek coalition govt leaders will meet again Wednesday after failure to agree ...
Washington Post
ATHENS, Greece — The heads of the three parties in Greece's new coalition government will meet again Wednesday to try and agree on further austerity cuts demanded by the country's bailout creditors. Despite two meetings in less than a week ...
Greek coalition chiefs to hold new austerity talksBoston.com

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Greek names new betting firm chief


Greek names new betting firm chief
Reuters
ATHENS, July 31 (Reuters) - Greece has appointed economist Konstantinos Louropoulos as president and chief executive of state-controlled betting firm OPAP to replace Yannis Spanoudakis, the finance ministry said on Tuesday. Top management changes ...

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Greece to shift hundreds of police from guard duty to patrols in hopes of ...


Greece to shift hundreds of police from guard duty to patrols in hopes of ...
Washington Post
ATHENS, GreeceGreece plans to shift roughly half of its police officers who are used for guard duty to crime-fighting efforts in cities instead, the national police spokesman said Tuesday. He added that a move to massively boost security at the ...

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Greece strips VIPs of police guards amid public anger

ATHENS (Reuters) - Thousands of police officers guarding Greek politicians and other VIPs will be redeployed to fight street crime, police said on Tuesday, in a move aimed at quelling public anger over the privileges of the ruling class in a near-bankrupt country.



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Greece shifting many police guards to patrol duty


Greece shifting many police guards to patrol duty
The Associated Press
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greece plans to shift roughly half of its police officers who are used for guard duty to crime-fighting efforts in cities instead, the national police spokesman said Tuesday. He added that a move to massively boost security at ...


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Greek leaders to meet again Wednesday on austerity measures: sources

ATHENS (Reuters) - Greek political leaders supporting the three-party coalition government will meet again on Wednesday to discuss austerity measures demanded by international lenders to bring the bailout program back on track, government officials said.



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Greece to focus on Postbank, OPAP privatisations-source


Greece to focus on Postbank, OPAP privatisations-source
Reuters
ATHENS, July 31 | Tue Jul 31, 2012 7:24pm IST. ATHENS, July 31 (Reuters) - Greece will focus on selling off state-controlled lender Hellenic Postbank and betting firm OPAP as it revives a long-stalled privatisation drive, a government official said on ...
Greece to focus on Postbank, OPAP privatisationsCapital.gr (press release)

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Here's Why the Cayman Islands Is Considering Fiscal Suicide

What Do Greece, the United States, and the Cayman Islands Have in Common? At first, this seems like a trick question. After all, the Cayman Islands are a fiscal paradise, with no personal income tax, no corporate income tax, no capital gains tax, and no death tax. By contrast, Greece is a [...]

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Loverdos condemns education bill

Pasok MP Andreas Loverdos has condemned the draft bill for higher education that was tabled in parliament as urgent on Monday, calling on MPs to vote against it.

Loverdos says that the government’s initiative is counter-reform and sends out the wrong message about Greece.

According to the Pasok MP the bill should either be withdrawn or voted against,because it lacks democratic legitimacy and the reforms contained in it are all wrong.

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Greece to continue to increase border security to deal with illegal migration; cuts elsewhere

ATHENS, Greece - An official says Greece will continue to increase border security to deal with illegal immigration, while security for politicians and the policing of public sites will be halved to enforce patrols in Greek cities.

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There is a euro crisis solution – use the European Stability Mechanism | Sebastian Dullien

Granting a banking licence to the ESM, rather than using the European Central Bank, would be a more democratic fix

Across Europe, reactions to the latest signals that the European Central Bank (ECB) might play a larger role in battling the euro crisis have been very different. While markets have rejoiced and spreads of periphery government bonds have come down significantly, the German public has been outraged. Not only have populist politicians from both the government and opposition parties denounced the ECB's plans, editorials in important media have also warned of a slippery slope towards financing governments with the printing press.

In spite of the German outcry, however, the economic argument for ECB action is extremely sound. There are signs that we are observing something which is known among economists as a "self-fulfilling fiscal crisis". The set-up of such a crisis is simple. If government debt has reached a certain level, the country's solvency depends on investors' expectations. If investors believe that a government can continue to service its debt, they will demand low interest rates and the country in question remains solvent. If investors start doubting the government's ability to fulfill its payment obligations, they will demand higher interest rates and these higher interest rates themselves will cause insolvency.

The catch of such a set-up is that one can stabilise expectations (and hence the situation) by promising ample credit to a government in distress. If the country in question can tap decently priced loans from a multilateral institution in case private investors withdraw, there is no reason for private investors to call into question the solvency of the government and the self-fulfilling crisis is defused.

Alternatively, if the central bank would explicitly or implicitly guarantee to buy enough bonds in the secondary market to keep interest rates from rising above a certain threshold, expectations would also be stabilised in the "good" equilibrium. This mechanism is also the reason why countries with their own central bank and debt in their own currency such as the US or the UK have so far not been victim of market panic, even though their debt-to-GDP ratio has been higher than in some of the euro crisis countries.

What is central to stabilise investors' expectations is that there is no doubt that a sufficient amount of loans can be provided. As the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) and the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) rescue funds are too small to promise such unlimited support, the ECB is the only actor to really prevent the self-fulfilling crisis.

Moreover, in contrast to popular German fears, there is little doubt that the ECB could do so without creating inflation. The European economy is extremely weak at the moment. Additional money supply is not used for transactions, but is saved, mainly in central bank accounts. In such a situation, there is little danger of higher price increases due to bond purchases. In addition, the ECB would have sufficient time to sell bonds again and thus mop up liquidity, should the crisis submerge and the euro area economy recover.

Of course there are political complications. In some of the countries of the euro area – such as Greece and to a certain extent Italy – excessive public spending or insufficient taxation were elements that contributed to the current crisis. In these cases, one should not give unlimited and unconditional loans at low interest rates.

Last summer, the ECB thus dictated conditions in terms of fiscal and structural reforms to the Italian government before it started buying Italian bonds. However, such a set-up creates a lot of problems: for one, the ECB does not really have the expertise on the fiscal and economic reforms required to make public debt sustainable and kickstart growth. Moreover, it clearly does not have the legitimacy to dictate such wide-ranging policies. It has been given independence for a closely defined realm of maintaining price stability. Giving it the additional power to control economic and fiscal policy across Europe would turn the democratic principle on its head.

A much cleaner solution would thus be to grant a banking licence to the ESM. The ESM, which is controlled by democratically elected national governments, could then set conditions under which it guarantees low interest rates to crisis countries. Such low interest rates could easily be enforced if the firepower of the ESM were increased, by allowing it to borrow from the ECB against its holdings of government bonds.

The pressure on member states to reform would remain in place, yet a self-fulfilling solvency crisis could be averted. Instead of crying wolf about any possible ECB intervention, Germany should also push for such a solution: a rule-bound ESM with a banking licence would be much closer to Germany's approach of rule-based policy-making than an ECB that intervenes in bond markets at its own discretion.


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Geithner talks to EU, German policy makers





U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and his German counterpart stressed the need for coordinated action Monday in the face of the eurozone debt crisis and faltering global growth, but left open what joint steps Europe and the United States would take to shore up the world economy in the coming months.

The joint statement made no reference to Greece, which has struggled to implement the reform package agreed with its creditors.

Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at the Martin Smith School of Business at California State University Channel Islands, said the joint Geithner-Schaeuble statement did not offer any new solutions for the European debt crisis.


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Tens of thousands flee Syria's embattled city of Aleppo


AFP

Tens of thousands flee Syria's embattled city of Aleppo
CTV News
Syrian rebels sit in a pick up truck in Aleppo, Syria, Saturday, July 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Alberto Prieto) The Associated Press BUKULMEZ, Turkey -- Smoking a cigarette outside a Turkish hospital near the Syrian border, a man in a grey gown and ...
Tens of Thousands Flee Syria's Largest CityTIME
Syrian refugees flee Aleppo attacksNewsday
Turkey Strengthens Forces on Syrian BorderNew York Times

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Police arrest Greece man after murder threat


News 10NBC

Police arrest Greece man after murder threat
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
Greece police received the call about 2:20 a.m. Sat., July 28, and 911 operators reported they could hear a man saying as soon as the police come to the door he would kill everybody and that “life is over for him and her tonight.” Police report they ...
Greece man arrested after standoff with policeNews 10NBC

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Tens of Thousands Flee Syria's Largest City


TIME

Tens of Thousands Flee Syria's Largest City
TIME
By AP | + Turkpix / AP In this Tuesday, July 24, 2012 photo, a Syrian boy sits atop a damaged military tank at the border town of Azaz, some 20 miles (32 kilometers) north of Aleppo, Syria. Turkey sealed its border with Syria to trucks on Wednesday, ...
Syrian refugees flee Aleppo attacksNewsday
Tens of thousands flee Syria's embattled city of AleppoWashington Post
Turkey Strengthens Forces on Syrian BorderNew York Times

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Greece Pushes for Extension on Bailout


AFP

Greece Pushes for Extension on Bailout
Wall Street Journal
ATHENS—The leaders of Greece's ruling coalition, struggling to reach consensus over an austerity plan, will seek an extension of the country's bailout program, a senior government official said, hoping to spread cuts of €11.5 billion ($14.17 billion ...
Greece Pushes for Loan-Deal ExtensionNASDAQ
Greek coalition government wrestles with new cutsLexington Herald Leader
Greek PM's allies seek more time for austerity cuts-sourcesReuters
AFP -Newser -In These Times
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Political leaders find no final agreement after meeting

A meeting of the three party leaders in Greece's coalition government ended on Monday evening without firm final agreement on the measures that will be adopted to reduce Greece's deficit by 11.5 billion euro.

The head of the Democratic Left (Dem.Ar) party Fotis Kouvelis, repeatedly emphasised the need for an overall strategic plan in statements after the meeting.

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Greek PM's allies seek more time for austerity cuts


AFP

Greek PM's allies seek more time for austerity cuts - sources
Reuters
ATHENS (Reuters) - Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras's allies are pushing for two more years to implement unpopular austerity cuts before they sign off on them, sources close to the parties said on Monday, potentially delaying a deal on the savings ...
Greek coalition government parties still wrestling with new cuts demanded by ...Washington Post
Greek Talks on Two-Year Budget, Longer-Term Strategy to ContinueBloomberg
Greek coalition government wrestles with new cuts to assure bailout moneyFox News

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Greece Pushes for Extension as It Works on Cuts

Greece's ruling coalition leaders are struggling to reach consensus over the right austerity mix to be imposed on recession-stricken Greeks and will seek an extension of the country's bailout program, hoping to spread cuts of €11.5 billion ($14.17 billion) over a longer period even as international creditors have signaled that such a demand wouldn't be acceptable.

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