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  1. Glimmer of hope for efforts to negotiate over tax-free threshold, but not primary surplus
    Photo by MacroPolis

    EconomyProgramme

    . The change would also eat into the extra income that employees gained through the 11 percent increase

    27%
  2. Newsletter 203 -15/04/2019

    Newsletters

    compared to nothing this year. The change would also eat into the extra income that employees gained

    27%
  3. OECD sees Greek economy most at risk from Covid-19, with impact reaching up to 35 pct of GDP
    Photo by MacroPolis

    Economy

    on clothing, footwear, household goods and package holidays. Consumers around the globe will also not eat

    27%
  4. Greeks less optimistic in face of second Covid-19 wave, survey finds
    Photo via https://flic.kr/p/qBfXZi

    Society

    (76.3 percent) said that they go to fewer social events. Almost 63 percent said that they eat out

    27%
  5. Newsletter 334 - 08/04/2022

    Newsletters

    prices eat up real wages, as well as forcing changes to travel plans due to the conflict. A factor

    27%
  6. Tension with Turkey dominates government agenda at home and abroad

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    that inflation continues to eat away at the government’s popularity.

    27%
  7. PM allows his MPs to abstain from same-sex marriage vote, puts ball in opposition court
    Photo by MacroPolis

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    to “have his cake and eat it” by pandering to the objections of right-wingers while counting

    27%
  8. Demand for cost-of-living measures intensifies as opposition backs strike

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    the strike that price hikes continue to eat at the purchasing power of Greek workers, claiming

    27%
  9. Newsletter 467 - 20/06/2025

    Newsletters

    authorities want to see is another wave of energy driven inflation that will further eat away Greeks

    27%
  10. Conflict in Middle East puts fresh pressure on economy

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    driven inflation that will further eat away Greeks disposable income. Private spending remains

    27%