Un articol excelent marca Bloomberg despre situatia din Grecia – sper sa nu apara unul similar si despre Romania peste cativa ani.
_______
Greeks Taking Bribes Thwart Papandreou’s Effort to Solve Crisis
Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) – When Aris Kefalogiannis started his olive oil company in Athens more than a decade ago, he says, bureaucrats in crowded offices demanded bribes to approve long lists of permits. After a year of dodging shakedowns, Kefalogiannis moved the legal seat of his company, Gaea Products SA, to the small city of Agrinion. Government outposts there had fewer functionaries looking for payoffs, he says.
„Bribery is a result of the bureaucracy” says Kefalogiannis, 49, the company’s chief executive officer. „People get fed up and will pay anything not to waste more time. It leads to slower growth and less investment in Greece.”
Greece’s attempt to dig itself out of its worst financial crisis in about 16 years and avoid a bailout is hampered by rampant bribery and tax evasion, says Costas Bakouris, chairman of the Greek chapter of Transparency International, Bloomberg Markets magazine reported in its March issue. Greece, along with Bulgaria and Romania, is among the most-corrupt countries in the 27-member European Union and comparable to cocaine-infested Colombia, says the research group.
„Greece’s economic problems are exacerbated by corruption, which makes countries less competitive” says Bakouris, 73, who was managing director of the organizing committee of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games and European chairman of the former Ralston Purina Co.
Cracking Down on Crime
Prime Minister George Papandreou, whose socialist government took power in October, pledged to crack down on financial crimes that have helped bury the nation in about 300 billion euros ($430 billion) of debt. In December, three rating firms cut the creditworthiness of the country’s debt to the lowest grade among the 16 euro-zone nations.
As investors fled, the spread between Greek 10-year bonds and German bunds, Europe’s benchmark government securities, widened to as much as 356 basis points on Jan. 27, the most in more than 11 years. (A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.) On Jan. 25, Greece showed it had the ability to raise funds when it sold 8 billion euros of five-year notes in its first bond issue since being downgraded. Greece offered a yield that was 0.3 percentage point more than on its existing debt with similar maturities.
Papandreou, 57, the leader of the Panhellenic Socialist Movement, or Pasok, has assured investors that the country won’t need a bailout. He has promised to slash the deficit by 2013 to less than 3 percent of GDP – the EU limit – from 12.7 percent in 2009. To back up that pledge, the government in January proposed boosting the tax on tobacco products to 70 percent and the levy on alcohol by 20 percent; it also plans to freeze hiring and cut state employee bonuses by 10 percent.
„Great Opportunity”;
Facing pressure from unions, which plan to strike on Feb. 10, Papandreou stopped short of eliminating government positions: They constitute about 14 percent of all jobs in an economy that had 9.8 percent unemployment in October.
Bond investors encouraged by the government’s response to the crisis say Greek debt is now a bargain.
„It’s a great opportunity”; says Claus Meyer-Cording, who helps manage about $15 billion in bonds as head of euro-zone debt at DWS Investment GmbH in Frankfurt. „European politicians wouldn’t let countries like Greece go down that really try to solve their own problems.”
Papandreou belongs to one of Greece’s most prominent political families – and one that hasn’t escaped the taint of corruption. Papandreou’s grandfather George was premier three times in the 1940s and 1960s, and his father, Andreas, held the post twice in the 1980s and 1990s. Parliament indicted Andreas and other ministers on bribery and embezzlement charges in 1989. He was acquitted three years later.
Doctorates in Cabinet
The newly elected Papandreou isn’t the first Greek leader to pledge to fight corruption. His predecessor, Kostas Karamanlis, took office in 2004 and aimed to curtail abuses partly by reducing government employment. Karamanlis didn’t succeed in shrinking the bureaucracy. Last year, Papandreou ran against Karamanlis on a platform including more pay for civil servants and won a national election by the widest margin in almost 30 years.
To clean up the pay-to-play economy, the new premier is relying on Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou, 48, who has a Ph.D. from the London School of Economics, and Louka Katseli, 57, the minister of economy, shipping and competitiveness. She is a former Yale University economics professor with a doctorate from Princeton University in New Jersey.
Targeting Tax Cheats
A month after the government took power, Papaconstantinou targeted doctors in Athens hillside Kolonaki neighborhood, where boutiques sell expensive Manolo Blahnik shoes and French cheese. So many Greek companies and employees cheat on their taxes that a third of all economic activity delivers no revenue to the government, the Finance Ministry says.
The ministry examined the tax records of 150 doctors offices and found that more than half had declared income of less than 30,000 euros. That figure is a fraction of what a full-time physician in Kolonaki makes, Transparency International’s Bakouris says.
Some Greeks say tax evasion is rooted in the Ottoman Empire’s control of the country for centuries until the 1820s.
„We very much lack a tax conscience” says Ilias Plaskovitis, the Finance Ministry’s general secretary. „Some trace it back to the Ottoman Empire, when tax evasion was resistance to foreign powers.”
Papaconstantinou promised in November that his ministry would conduct full audits of the doctors in Kolonaki and other professionals across the country.
Bribes
The government will also expand a requirement that citizens who take tax deductions for expenses produce receipts. Today, Greeks routinely pay cash for a wide range of services, from plumbing to medical visits, without demanding a receipt, allowing the providers to forgo declaring the income to tax authorities. The government projected in January that its crackdown will generate 1.2 billion euros in additional income this year.
In December at an EU summit, Papandreou outlined plans to fight bribery, which he said is so pervasive that Greeks consider the crime to be normal behavior.
„Investments can’t come to Greece, our economy won’t stand on its own feet, if we don’t attack corruption mercilessly, „Papandreou said at the summit.
Greek citizens made 900 million euros in payoffs nationwide in 2008, according to Transparency International. Its 2009 survey of 6,000 Greek citizens found that 300 euros was the going rate for a bribe to pass an automobile emission inspection. The cost to jump to the top of a waiting list for an operation in a state hospital was about 2,500 euros.
Gifts for the Minister
The prime minister, who attributes corruption partly to a secretive political system, vowed to make officials post their expenditures on the Internet. He said he also plans to start an economic police squad to nab crooked civil servants and tax evaders. The national police say they brought criminal charges in 15 bribery cases against public workers and cops in 2008.
In Greece, Christmas is also an opportunity to give gifts to officials. On Dec. 23, two days before the holiday, an employee of the Chinese Embassy stopped by the Athens office of Culture and Tourism Minister Pavlos Yeroulanos to drop off three bags of presents. Moments later, a courier deposited a wicker basket filled with wine bottles. A ministry spokeswoman says Greece has no official rules about gifts for officials.
„I send back all the gifts except the books and the alcohol,” says Yeroulanos, 43, who has an MBA from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. „Corruption and bureaucracy are strangling new efforts. Unless we deal with these phenomena, we will never manage to allow Greek talent to flourish.”
Parthenon Marbles
The government says graft in Greece goes back centuries and touches the nation’s most-enduring temple of antiquity: the Parthenon in Athens. In the early 1800s, a British ambassador, the Earl of Elgin, paid Ottoman officials in Athens to help him spirit away marble friezes that decorated the perimeter of the Parthenon, Greek officials say.
The British Museum holds about half of the surviving marbles and has refused to return them, saying they were obtained lawfully. Lord Elgin’s payments were presents given according to the customs of the times, the museum says.
The June opening in Athens of the Acropolis Museum, which the government built specifically to house the carvings, hasn’t convinced the British to send them back to Greece. Yeroulanos, standing among marble statues at the museum, points to the walls where the carved panels would be displayed.
„It’s a cultural deficit” he says.
Developing Tourism
Yeroulanos, with his hair combed back and sporting a stubbly beard, presides over the largest part of the Greek economy: Tourism comprises about 18 percent of GDP. He says the luring of travelers beyond the summer months, when most visitors to Greece flock to its islands such as Mykonos, known for all- night beach parties, is the country’s best hope for economic recovery.
He wants to attract investors to build year-round theme parks and resorts infused with Greek culture. One proposal: an Olympics park near the site of the original games that took place at least as long ago as the eighth century B.C.
„Developing tourism should be a priority for Greece,” bond manager Meyer-Cording says.
Costa Navarino, Greece’s biggest tourist development, illustrates how a bureaucracy can slow down a project in the EU’s 12th-largest economy.
Mycenaean Architecture
In the early 1980s, shipping magnate Vassilis Constantakopoulos started buying land in an olive-growing region south of Athens to build the resort. He set up a company in 1997 to develop Costa Navarino and, at a cost of more than 500 million euros, is building golf courses, villas inspired by vaulted Mycenaean architecture and hotels with private swimming pools for guests in the most-expensive suites. Costa Navarino plans to open in May, 13 years after the project began.
Greece’s debt debacle has given Papandreou an opening to battle a crooked bureaucracy. Investors are waiting to see whether the prime minister will have any more success than his forebears in cleaning up the corruption that has dogged the economy for centuries.
Contabilitate, fiscalitate, studii de caz, monografii contabile, salarizare