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  1. Three things to watch out for in today's Greek elections
    Photo by MacroPolis

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    percentage points ahead of New Democracy (32.5 vs 26.5). The gap had grown by 2.2 percentage points from

    3%
  2. Greek stocks recover some losses after turbulent start to week

    Economy

    (OTE) remained in negative territory (down 2.2 percent). Turnover remained high although it eased

    3%
  3. Commission sees political uncertainty hurting recovery, growth reaching 2.5 pct in 2015

    Economy

    . The EC expects private consumption to increase by 1.7 percent in 2015 and further by 2.2 percent

    3%
  4. Structural problems and dramatic drop in funding harm mental health care in Greece
    Photo by Harry van Versendaal

    Society

    head of population (2.2 per 100,000) in the 30 countries included in the survey. A bigger problem

    3%
  5. Greek trade deficit widens by 26.9 pct in December

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    . In absolute terms, exports reached 2.2 billion euros in December, falling for the second straight

    3%
  6. Greek stocks tumble, bond yields rise in wake of Tsipras speech

    Economy

    of the 5-year bond widened more than 2.2 pp to 16.51 percent from 14.25 percent on Friday

    3%
  7. Greek Q4 GDP down 0.2 pct QoQ, 2014 nominal GDP stays in recession

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    by 1.4 percent in 2014 accelerating to 1.7 percent in 2015 and further to 2.2 percent in 2016. Gross

    3%
  8. Greek funding needs add to pressure in talks between Athens and lenders

    EconomyProgramme

    . The most recent reports by the European Commission and IMF put revenue from asset sales at 2.2 billion

    3%
  9. Finance Ministry targets 3 bln from unpaid taxes

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    to 3,000 euros stands at 1.6 billion (2.2 percent of total), while the respective figure for unpaid taxes

    3%
  10. Greek central gov't debt rises to recent high of 181.1 pct at end of Q4 2014

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    by a net decrease in Financial Support Mechanism (FSM) loans (by 2.2 million). The rise in T-Bills stems

    3%