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Greek radiologists, nurses and hospital staff who work with x-rays on strike today outside the Greek Health Ministry in Athens. AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris

Greek unemployment hit record high in March – up 40pc on last year

The total number of people out of work in Greece has risen 40 per cent since last year, when unemployment was at 11.6 per cent.

UNEMPLOYMENT in debt-ridden Greece hit new record highs in March as government officials wrangled over tough new austerity measures required to tap the country’s rescue funds.

The jobless rate increased to 16.2 per cent in March from 15.9 per cent in February, the country’s statistics agency said today. The total number of Greeks out of work was 811,340, up 40 per cent from a year earlier, when the unemployment rate was 11.6 per cent.

March’s is the highest level of joblessness recorded since the statistics agency began issuing figures in 2004. The government had projected an overall unemployment rate of 14.5 per cent for this year in its 2011 budget.

Further austerity measures

The situation is expected to get worse as the government imposes yet more austerity measures to meet targets set out in the agreement for Greece’s €110 billion package of rescue loans.

Cutbacks and tax increases taken over the past year have already led to anger among workers and unions, which has been compounded by the realisation that the measures did not produce all of the results they were expected to.

Ministers are now tussling over the details of additional cutbacks and tax hikes, including €6.4 billion worth of remedial austerity measures for this year, and a midterm programme to run from 2012-2015, two years beyond the current government’s mandate.

Strikes

The government is also pushing through a €50 billion privatisation programme that includes public utilities. Workers at state companies facing privatisation have called their first strike against the plan for Thursday. Joined by much of the state sector in work stoppages, the strike will affect public transport, banks, post offices and the state television and radio stations.

Strikes have affected virtually all sectors at some stage, with workers holding demonstrations or picketing ministry buildings.

On Wednesday, radiology technicians became the latest group to protest, with about 300 gathering outside the Health Ministry in central Athens. The technicians, who held up placards printed on x-ray film, were protesting cuts to extra time off they receive due to their exposure to radiation at work.

Prime Minister George Papandreou is also faced with increasing frustration from within his own Socialist party — and among his ministers — over the new austerity.

Several Socialist lawmakers have criticised the measures, although none have said outright they oppose the plan, due to be voted on in Parliament by the end of this month. Papandreou was holding a second day of consultations with his party deputies Wednesday before the Cabinet discusses the plan on Thursday and submits it to Parliament.

His finance minister, George Papaconstantinou, came under heavy fire from disgruntled deputies during a marathon meeting Tuesday. Greek media reported that Vasso Papandreou, head of parliament’s financial affairs committee, accused Papaconstantinou of “lacking a plan and taking measures that will be short-lived.”

Labour minister Louka Katseli said some of the proposed measures would be “re-evaluated.”

The government also appears shaken by sustained anti-austerity rallies in Greek cities, which climaxed on Sunday with tens of thousands of peaceful protesters in central Athens.

Papandreou suggested after an informal cabinet meeting on Monday that he was open to holding a referendum on austerity measures, although government spokesman George Petalotis said the following day that there were no immediate plans for such a vote.

- AP

Read more: IMF rules out debt restructuring for Greece >

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    Mute Conor Reilly
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    Jun 8th 2011, 3:53 PM

    Replace ‘Greece’ with ‘Ireland’ and your headline will still be accurate!

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    Mute Paul
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    Jun 8th 2011, 6:57 PM

    For if we all think any country within the eurozone can keep going with austerity on its people then we have to think again something has to go here all to keep the euro going

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    Mute Mad Gerald
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    Jun 8th 2011, 7:10 PM

    People must understand that the Euro is a political entity not a viable financial one

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    Mute Thomas Stadler
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    Jun 9th 2011, 10:56 AM

    That is the thing Gerald, the Euro was never a currency based on economic realities, but political considerations. It is why so many external commentators said that it would fail in the long term, It still will, we should never have joined, it has been a profound mistake for this state.

    The Germans and the French wanted this currency, lets see if they are willing to accept it “for better for worse”. Europe is at risk of multiple states defaulting, the certains – like Greece, the very probables – like ourselves and Portugal, the possibles – like Belgium, Spain, Italy. Some would even include France here.

    So after 10 years of monetary union, nearly half of the states in the Euro are at risk of default and its banking system in most countries, including Germany is at risk of collapse.

    Whatever the rights and wrongs of the Euro, it was a rush job, convergence should have gone on for another 20 years, it did not, as the powers in the EU at the time, wanted to be the names in the history book.

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