ATHENS, Greece (AP) -
A leftist Greek government won't run deficits, but will pursue fiscal consolidation,
the main opposition party's chief economy policymaker said Saturday.
Speaking two days
before a crucial parliamentary vote for Greek president will determine whether
the country will go to early elections in January or February, Milios appeared
certain Greece is headed for early elections that will result in a stable
Syriza majority.
Milios, a
German-educated economist and academic, has been portrayed as "the most hard-liner"
of the advisers close to Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras. He struck a cautious
line - a sign perhaps of Syriza's move towards a more pragmatic stance as they
move closer to power.
All recent polls have
Syriza winning a snap election, although whether they will achieve an outright
majority is still in dispute.
But Milios believes
Syriza will achieve a majority and the parliament will be stable "because
we are going to stabilize society...and this will be a new era for the economy.
We are going to boost growth and combat the humanitarian disaster."
Syriza's recipe for
boosting growth is through a fiscal stimulus, targeted at lower incomes in
order to boost their spending power. "But we shall also work to avoid what
happened in the past, such as over-indebtedness," Milios says.
Perhaps surprisingly,
Milios doesn't advocate a Keynesian deficits policy. "No, we are not going
to follow a deficit policy. On the other hand, we will not accept, like the
present government has agreed, to create an enormous budget surplus, 4.5
percent (of gross domestic product) in 2016. "Austerity has been
disastrous in the long term ... all targets have failed," Milios insists.
"There is a wind
of change all over Europe," he says, pointing to the emergence of Podemos
in Spain and the opposition of German trade unions to austerity. He believes
Greece's creditors will be forced to back down from their current demands.
"They will not
agree at the beginning, (but) the negotiations will go on. But we have a common
interest...solvency in the euro zone. Nobody wants to force one country into
default...So, we are sure we'll have an agreement in the medium term. We can
agree on certain targets to achieve, not on the means to achieve them."
Milios also said
Syriza won't attempt to bring incomes back to pre-crisis levels, but will begin
by helping the neediest. He was also adamant that the best course for Greece is
to remain in the eurozone.
(Πηγή: tucson.com)