inbluevt | Date: Monday, 2013/09/09, 6:45 PM | Message # 1 | DMCA |
|
Private
Group: Blocked
Messages: 1024
|
The European Commission has criticized Cyprus for announcing policies that will boost public spending. The country needs to consult its creditors in the future to minimize the impact of its measures on reform progress, the Commission said in a draft report.
The European Commission has criticized the government of Cyprus for increasing public spending without consulting its international creditors first. In a draft report seen by SPIEGEL, the Commission said Cyprus had announced a number of steps that will boost outlays, such as a plan to grant tax advantages to customers of Cypriot banks to encourage them to shift their capital back to the island.
The troika -- made up of the European Commission, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank -- recently scrutinized the progress Cyprus is making in implementing reforms imposed as a condition for the international bailout of €10 billion ($13.17 billion) given to the small Mediterranean island nation in April.
Under the terms of the bailout, Cyprus shrank its oversized banking sector, the mainstay of its economy, by closing the second biggest bank, Laiki, and restructuring Bank of Cyprus. It also agreed to raise taxes, cut spending and implement structural reforms to improve its public finances and to be able to eventually repay its debt.
More
Demonstrators protesting outside parliament against the terms of the Cypriot bailout in Nicosia last Thursday.
Message edited by inbluevt - Monday, 2013/09/09, 6:47 PM |
|
| |