IMF - GREECE
Greece has stabilized its economy and begun to grow. The authorities deserve
credit for largely eliminating macroeconomic imbalances, including via a significant fiscal
adjustment, and for many other reforms undertaken in recent years. Reflecting these
efforts, European partners have provided significant support, most recently agreeing to a
final loan disbursement under the ESM program and additional debt relief. However, as
the country exits the program era in August, crisis legacies and an unfinished policy
reform agenda in most areas weigh on Greece’s prospects. High public debt, weak bank
balance sheets, reliance on capital controls and emergency liquidity assistance, and
worrisome social indicators, including still-high unemployment, all weigh on growth and
social cohesion. Fiscal adjustment has been sizable, but has relied on distortionary high
tax rates on still-narrow bases and growth-detrimental discretionary spending cuts, and
efforts to bring down tax and spending arrears have been met with limited success.
Social spending is better targeted, but many social needs remain unmet and the risk of
poverty remains high. Bank credit continues to shrink. Structural reform efforts to
address obstacles to growth and competitiveness—while significant—have fallen wellshort
of what is needed, and competitiveness indicators remain below the Euro Area
average. Notably, the planned reversal of reforms to the collective bargaining framework
risks undoing previous gains in competitiveness.
See Country Report 18/248
See Country Report 18/248
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