Greece needs privatisation body - Eurogroup's Juncker

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BERLIN | Sat May 21, 2011 6:24pm BST

BERLIN (Reuters) - Greece should set up a trustee institution to help privatise state assets, similar to the body that privatised East German companies after the fall of communism, Eurogroup's Jean-Claude Juncker said.

Juncker, who chairs meetings of euro zone finance ministers, suggested setting up a Greek version of Germany's so-called Treuhandanstalt agency in an interview with news weekly Der Spiegel, excerpts of which were released Saturday.

"I would welcome it very much if our Greek friends found a privatisation agency independent of the government and modelled after Germany's Treuhandanstalt," Juncker said, adding that such a body should be staffed by international experts.

"Henceforth, the European Union will escort Greece's privatisation program as if we were conducting it ourselves," he said. Proceeds from the program should be considerably higher than the 50 billion euros Athens has proposed, he added.

Greece is under pressure from its creditors to take more fiscal measures and speed up privatisations, after disappointing budget figures for January-April suggested it will miss the deficit targets set under its bailout program for a second consecutive year in 2011.

Last week, Athens appointed advisers for 15 privatisation projects including the sale of its 34 percent stake in Europe's biggest betting company OPAP.

Because the highly indebted country is not expected to be able to return to capital markets next year, as foreseen under its 2010 aid package, it faces a 27 billion euro funding gap in 2012.

In his interview with Der Spiegel, Juncker said Greek politicians needed to make a non-partisan effort to publicly back structural adjustment agreements with the EU.

"The government and opposition should declare conjointly their commitment to reform agreements with the EU," he said.

Juncker, from Luxembourg, last week raised the prospect of a "soft restructuring" of Greek debt, but European governments do not appear to be united behind the idea.

He told Der Spiegel that such a move should only be considered once Greece has consolidated its state budget.

"Only then could we consider extending the terms of public and private loans and lowering interest," he said.

Turning to Europe's future bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, Juncker said he did not see a problem with Germany's parliament taking part in individual decisions to grant aid to troubled countries.

"I fully appreciate that where parliament's budgetary sovereignty is affected, elected representatives want to take part in the decision," he said.

(Writing by Brian Rohan; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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Comments (1)
ektope wrote:
Greece cannot default because if she does she will go back to the 18th century.The Greeks are like petty crooks who want to continue living on the expense of other Europeans .From day one they join the EU , they have been cheating i.e exporting to Eu Bulgarian meat as Greek meat !They cooked their books to cheat their way into the Euro zone . They do not want to pay the money they have borrowed from other European banks. This applies for most of the Greeks who have been borrowing money to buy cars and houses and now they do not want to pay back. They do not want to work and pay their debts but they want to demonstrate and go out to night clubs and enjoy themselves on the expense of others.Unfortunately for the rest of Europe they are crooked minded and should be kicked out of the EU not tomorrow but today. Their place is in the third world.

May 21, 2011 9:15pm BST  --  Report as abuse
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