bammie schreef op 22 juni 2015 14:07:
Hahaha, de Grieken hadden eerst een verkeerd voorstel op de email gezet.:)
According to FT,
Greek officials e-mailed the wrong proposal to Brussels just after midnight (something Athens later denied) then sent a revised version just after 9:30 Monday morning. Whatever the case, the version that ended up in front of Europe’s top brass has been billed as a “step in the right direction” despite the fact that it doesn't look to contain any of the concessions previously demanded by the IMF and the EU. As a reminder, the new Greek proposal reportedly calls for the following (via Bloomberg):
Greek plan to unlock bailout funds includes proposal to eliminate early retirement options starting from Jan. 1, 2016, a Greek government official says, asking not to be named.
Plan includes levy on companies with more than €500,000 in annual profits
Plan includes increase in “solidarity levy” for individuals earning more than €30,000/yr
Creditors ask permanent fiscal measures equal to 2.5% of GDP, Greece proposes measures equal to 2%/GDP; proposes to cover difference of 0.5%/GDP with “administrative measures”
Greek govt would agree to target demanded by creditors for 1%/GDP primary budget surplus
Greek govt insists on 3 bands for VAT rates; creditors want 2 bands; Greek govt proposes to move more products to higher band of 23%, in order to cover fiscal gap
Greek govt has proposed zero deficit clause, debt break for Greek budget; clause would include automatic spending cuts in case threshold is breached
Greek govt would be willing to adopt additional fiscal measures, if agreement with creditors includes commitment to debt relief.