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Newsletter 22 - 03/04/2015
, technocrats can readily assess the impact of an increase in VAT, even if it is just on the islands
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Greece and its lenders: Where do you start?
Agorahikes. For instance, technocrats can readily assess the impact of an increase in VAT, even
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As hopes of April 24 deal fade, differences between Greece and lenders remain
PoliticsGreek Politicsgovernment. Athens has shown it is willing to be flexible on some issues, such as VAT (Alternate
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Travel receipts increase 16.2 pct in Feb as arrivals shoot up by 56.2 pct
EconomyMacroeconomybillion. SETE has also stressed that a stable tax framework, mainly related to VAT on islands
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Greece is gasping for a deal
Agorapensions and an increase in VAT on Greek islands. The coalition, however, wants to introduce new
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The faces change, the issues remain the same
Agoradays. Privatisations, labour market liberalisation, VAT hikes and, most of all, pension reform
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Gov't sees reform multi-bill as path to funding but resistance abounds
PoliticsGreek Politics, such as pension reform, VAT hikes and labour market liberalisation. It appears that the Greek
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Greece eyes temporary solution to liquidity problem from Brussels Group talks
PoliticsGreek Politicspensions, privatisations, labour market reforms and VAT hikes to overcome. Finance Minister Yanis
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Back to the technocrats for Tsipras after Riga meeting yields little
PoliticsGreek Politicsthe institutions. VAT has also emerged as bone of contention over the last few days. Sakellaridis confirmed
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Greece holds back spending, rakes in one-off revenues for 2.1 bln primary surplus at end of April
Economybelow target. In particular, VAT revenues were up 0.3 percent in April and down 2.4 percent
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