Search

Results 91 to 100 out of 1314. RSS
  1. Glimmer of hope for efforts to negotiate over tax-free threshold, but not primary surplus
    Photo by MacroPolis

    EconomyProgramme

    of GDP (roughly 1.8 billion euros). The government is reportedly hoping that there will be a pleasant

    31%
  2. Lenders set to highlight reform delays, leaving fiscal gap concerns until after elections
    Photo by Panayiotis Tzamaros/Fosphotos

    EconomyProgramme

    of interfering in Greek internal affairs. Nevertheless, the report is not likely to make pleasant

    31%
  3. Mitsotakis courts French investments, announces corporate tax cuts

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    be a pleasant surprise in terms of growth. There was no announcement regarding primary surplus targets, which

    31%
  4. Athens welcomes volume, form of Commission's pandemic recovery plan

    Economy

    There was a pleasant surprise for Greece on Wednesday when the European Commission announced its proposal for a Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) of 750 billion euros, which will be attached to the 1.1 trillion euros multi-year fiscal framework of 2021-2027. The Fund will consist of 500

    31%
  5. Athens wary as exploratory talks with Turkey approach
    Photo via https://flic.kr/p/2jQRsMX

    PoliticsForeign Policy

    . Otherwise, we need to proceed with the logic of Europe as a fortress. This would not be pleasant

    31%
  6. Newsletter 307 - 10/09/2021

    Newsletters

    direction.EconomyQ2 delivers timely GDP boostThe Greek authorities welcomed this week the pleasant

    31%
  7. Fiscal data for 2023 indicates that 2.1 pct of GDP goal is within reach

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    , from 258.91 billion in 2022. The size of the primary surplus in 2023 is a pleasant surprise

    31%
  8. Polls provide PM with some comfort, spell out size of task for opposition
    Image: https://x.com/kmitsotakis

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    leader Alexis Tsipras on 15.5 pct. These numbers will make pleasant reading in the PM’s office

    31%
  9. Lest we forget

    Agora

    “The people don’t forget, they hang fascists,” goes a chant that Greeks have been hearing for decades. This year, seeing the fascists being put behind bars will suffice for most. The slogan is born of the years of physical and mental pain inflicted by Greece’s far right on the left, dating back

    29%
  10. Polls turn in SYRIZA’s favour but also show that doubts persists

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    to such a degree that the threat of snap elections will not hang over the government after May. The recent

    29%