Eighth austerity package (Greece)
Eighth austerity package - April/July 2013 measures | |
---|---|
Hellenic Republic | |
1. Urgent measures on the application of Laws 4046/2012,. 4093/2012 and 4127/2013 (Law 4152/2013) 2. Income taxation, urgent measures for the implementation of law 4046/2012, of law 4093/2012 and of law 4127/2013 and other provisions. (Law 4172/2013) | |
Territorial extent | Greece |
Enacted by | Hellenic Parliament |
Date passed | 28 April 2013 and 17 July 2013 |
Introduced by | Government of Greece |
Status: In force |
The Eighth austerity package is part of the countermeasures of the Greek government to counter the Greek government-debt crisis. It includes two successive multi-bill with urgent measures so that Greece to receive the new instalment of the bailout package.
The multi-bill of April
The first multi-bill was approved by Greek parliament on 28 April 2013. 168 MPs voted for the bill, 128 voted against and 1 MPs abstained. The law provided mass layoff in the public sector, extension of the working hours for teachers and other provisions.[1] It also provided a new tax for immovable property that will be defined later.[2] The teachers reacted to the bill by declaring strikes. However, the government prohibited the right of strike, going ahead to the implementation of Civil mobilization.[3] With the mobilization of the teachers, the government completed four implementations of Civil mobilization during the last two years.
The multi-bill of June
On 17 July 2013, the evening before the arrival of German minister of finance Wolfgang Schäuble to a visit in Athens, the Greek Parliament approved an eighth austerity package to secure payment of its next €2.5 billion credit tranche. The package contains the layoff of another 15,000 public employees, among them high school teachers, school guards and municipal policemen.[4][5] After the withdrawal of Democratic Left (DIMAR) from the governing coalition in June, it was supported by only 153 of 300 deputies.[6] The next day, a general ban on demonstrations had been enacted and 4,000 police officers mobilized to avoid larger protests in the Greek capital during Schäuble's visit.[7]
See also
- First austerity package (Greece)
- Second austerity package (Greece)
- Third austerity package (Greece)
- Fourth austerity package (Greece)
- Fifth austerity package (Greece)
- Sixth austerity package (Greece)
- Seventh austerity package (Greece)
- Ninth austerity package (Greece)
- Tenth austerity package (Greece)
- Eleventh austerity package (Greece)
- Twelfth austerity package (Greece)
- Thirteenth austerity package (Greece)
References
- ↑ "Greek parliament approves draconian civil service job cuts". Russia: RT. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
- ↑ "Ολόκληρο το πολυνομοσχέδιο - Τα 20 σημεία κλειδιά". tovima.gr. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
- ↑ "Greece: Teachers Abandon Strike Plan". nytimes.com. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
- ↑ "Greece approves scheme to fire thousands of public workers". reuters.com. 17 July 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
- ↑ "Greece Approves New Austerity Measures". nytimes.com. 17 July 2013. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
- ↑ Böcking, David (2014-07-18). "New Public Sector Cuts: Austerity as Usual in Greek Parliament". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 2014-12-30.
- ↑ Dreier, Christoph (2013-07-19). "Greek government bans demonstrations in central Athens". World Socialist Web Site. Retrieved 2014-12-30.