Greece's coalition government has agreed on the main points of a multi-billion-euro austerity package needed to unlock EU-IMF loans, Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said on Thursday. "We have agreed on the main points," Stournaras said following a meeting of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and his political allies.
"We must agree with the 'troika' first, and (EU) peers next," the finance minister added in reference to Greece's three public creditors, the European Union, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank. According to the finance ministry, the budget measures approved include 11.5 billion euros ($14.8 billion) in spending cuts and two billion euros in fresh tax revenue.
Greece's trio of public creditors had given the government a week to finalise the cuts. Troika representatives are expected to return to Athens by early next week, and the government hopes to have the package ready before eurozone finance ministers meet on October 8. Stournaras could not say when the new measures would be presented for parliamentary approval. "We don't know when this will happen," he told reporters. Fotis Kouvelis, the head of the moderate leftist party that is part of the coalition, said that Greece would seek to introduce a clause permitting milder austerity measures if government revenue proved higher than anticipated.