Greece's
government is confident of reaching a deal with its creditors this week and is
open to pushing back parts of its anti-austerity program to make that happen,
the country's interior minister said Saturday.
"We
believe that we can and we must have a solution and a deal within the
week," Interior Minister Nikos Voutsis, who is not involved in Greece's
talks with the lenders, told Skai television.
"Some
parts of our program could be pushed back by six months or maybe by a year, so
that there is some balance," he said.
He did not
elaborate on what parts of the ruling Syriza party's anti-austerity program
could be pushed back, but the comments suggested a greater willingness to
compromise on pre-election pledges.
Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras stormed to power in January on promises to cancel
austerity, including restoring the minimum wage level and collective bargaining
rights.
The
government earlier this week said it hoped for a deal by Sunday, though
international lenders have been less optimistic, citing Greece's resistance to
labor and pension reforms that are conditions for more aid.
Voutsis
said Athens and its partners agreed on some issues, such as achieving low
primary budget surpluses in the first two years. But they still disagreed on a
sales tax, with Greece pushing so any VAT hikes will not burden lower incomes.
"A
powerful majority in the political negotiations has showed respect for the fact
that there can't be further austerity strategies for the Greek issue, the Greek
problem and the Greek people," he said.
The debt
stand-off between Greece and its European Union partners overshadowed a meeting
of policymakers from the Group of Seven rich nations in Dresden, Germany, on
Friday.
The United
States warned of a possible accident for the world economy if Greece and its
creditors miss their June deadlines to avert a debt default.
In an
interview with Realnews newspaper published on Saturday, Economy Minister
George Stathakis said Athens had no alternative plan.
"The
idea of a Plan B doesn't exist. Our country needs to stay in the eurozone but
on a better organized aid program," he said.
Stathakis
was confident a deal will be reached. "Otherwise, mainly Greece but the
European Union as well will step into unchartered waters and no-one wants
that."
(Πηγή:
reuters.com)
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