
In the wake of the severe downturn, the Greek economy is poised to see solid growth and job creation this year but the "crisis legacies remain significant," the IMF said.
In its first report since the nation exited the IMF loan program, the fund urged Athens to work quickly to strengthen banks that have a heavy load of bad loans still on their books.
"To maintain hard-earned competitiveness gains amid rising wage pressures, Greece should press ahead with its unfinished reform agenda," the IMF said.
"The authorities' growth strategy provides laudable high-level objectives but further measures will be needed to achieve them.
"The challenge facing the country, weary of reforms and belt tightening, will be to balance the need to improve the government's fiscal position while protecting social spending and reducing the tax burden.
The IMF estimates GDP growth of 2.4 percent this year -- just below the government's own 2.5 percent forecast -- but warned that investment growth "remains tepid."
from Latest News - SUCH TV http://bit.ly/2HxFR3w
0 comments: