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Newsletter 358 - 11/11/2022
PoliticsPM strives to avoid mire after new surveillance claimsKyriakos Mitsotakis called on Thursday for Greece to avoid allowing its politics to “sink into the mire” as next year’s general elections approach but the prime minister faces a growing challenge to avoid his centre-right party’s
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Budget primary surplus at 3.07 bln in Mar on back of 2022 tax collections, underspend
EconomyMacroeconomyby 1.51 billion euros, while transfers were up by 812 million euros. This overperformance is due
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Trump win emboldens Mitsotakis critics as Athens ponders implications of surprise result
PoliticsGreek PoliticsThe implications of the impending return of Donald Trump to the White House are beginning to sink in in Athens, where it was celebrated by prominent figures to the right of PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis but viewed with some concern by his foreign policy advisors. The Greek PM congratulated the president
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Greece digests EU-US trade deal amid mixed reaction
Economythat could sink the EU into recession and possibly lead to a global slowdown. That said, initial research
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Greece and the euro: The flight of Icarus
Agora($310 billion) from its bailout is going towards repaying existing debt means the amount Greece owes
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Greece's C/A deficit for March drops sharply to 44.4 mln
EconomyMacroeconomythe YtD amount to 310 million. The February outflow stemmed from a rise in resident’s investment
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Greek Jan-Apr primary budget surplus rises above 1 bln despite revenue shortfall
Economyto beat targets by 310 million, yet at a slower pace compared to the previous months. The year
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C/A deficit to April narrows by 34.7 pct boosted by services
EconomyMacroeconomy. The year to date net flow widened accordingly to 5.6 billion from 310 million at the end of the first
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How does ECB's decision on Greek banks' T-Bill exposure affect state liquidity?
Economyutilise 310 million euros (90 percent of HFSF cash reserves of 345 million) through an amendment
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Why Greece is asking for 1.2 bln back from the EFSF
AgoraI bonds), which for legal purposes was received by the HFSF as a fee. b) 310 million (90 percent
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