ATHENS: Greeks are split down the middle on whether public sector job cuts demanded by the country’s international lenders for continued bailout funding are necessary and most remain downbeat on the economy’s prospects, an opinion poll showed yesterday.
Greek municipal workers have taken to the streets against government plans to cut thousands of public-sector jobs, measures included in a multi-pronged bill to be voted on in parliament next week as a condition for more payments of aid.
Athens pledged to place 12,500 public sector workers including school guards, teachers and municipal police into a “mobility pool” by September, where they will have eight months to find work in other departments or lose their jobs.
According to the survey by pollster Metron Analysis for newspaper Ependytis, 47 percent of Greeks favour cuts to shrink the public sector but 50 percent think there should be no layoffs.
A 62 percent majority objects to the proposed closure of municipal police services. Greece is suffering record unemployment after six years of recession. Its unemployment rate is nearly 27 percent, more than double the euro zone’s average of 12.2 percent.
“The country’s sacred cow is on the butcher’s table but some claim (cuts) are being done without a plan under the weight of the country’s pledges to its international creditors,” Stratos Fanaras, head of Metron, told the paper.
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras defended the cuts in Sunday’s Proto Thema newspaper, saying they were needed to get the economy working again and keep funds flowing from Greece’s euro zone and International Monetary Fund backers. “What do you prefer, having school guards doing nothing substantive or nursing staff at public hospitals to care for you?” Samaras said.
Less than a week after Greece resolved its latest funding crunch but left some economists warning another debt restructuring in the future was still on the cards, Samaras reiterated his opposition to any further cutbacks. “I rule it out (austerity), we will continue to prove those who foresee new measures wrong,” he said.
Reuters