Congratulations and I wish you the best, hope Greece can become a success phoenix story and act as a model for other nations
Coinsworthy on
poli kala!
Haunting_Switch3463 on
Only three more years of starving.
GT7combat on
mister panos was right, greeks were only resting.
ExiledCaptain on
Every time a “success story” about Greece comes up it is for the macro-economy. Nothing ever about the average person living here.
We (THE PEOPLE) were supposed to see benefits from the severe austerity measures we took, starting in 2020, we are more than halfway to 2030 and we are in a worse situation than we were both when the crisis started in 2010 and at the peak of austerity measures in 2016.
– We have the 2nd (soon to be 1st) worst purchasing power in europe
– our true wages (including inflation) are reduced almost 20% since 2010
– we pay almost 2/3 of our wage for rent
– 27% of people living near or under the poverty line (21% in 2010 and 23.5% in 2016)
– 33% child poverty (lack of clothing and not full/complete meals)
– 60% of people reported they had inadequate heating during the winter
– we never recovered from the brain drain (the educated people never came back)
– we still only have tourism and even at that we are bad at it efficiency wise (people leave way less money here than in other countries, we spent way to much compared to more succesful countries etc)
– we have the most corrupt government we ever had in our history since 74′ which actively raids and loots our national – and European for that matter – resources (EE should really stop sending money if they cant get a prosecution when we embezzle funds and abuse the subsidies)
– the same incompetent fools have invested in nothing for the betterment of infrastructure or anything really, and we are basically gonna hit another crisis in 2-3years from now.
But yes we will get an A rating on a made up list of debt based nonsense.
REJOICE people of Greece, we eating CAKE.
owlexe23 on
International banks can’t wait to give more loans to Greece.
Dion33333 on
I was in Greece few weeks back for the first time and i was pleasantly surprised, the country look much better than Slovakia, seems money is invested in infrastructure – new airport, metro in Thessaloniki. Cheap transport, great people, ok prices, everybody speaks English, history everywhere, sea and mountains and also very safe country.
Cheer up a little my fellow Greeks, i will say, that ordinary Greek is still better off than a Slovak/Hungarian/other balkan countries. You atleast lived decently pre-2010 compared to these countries , and even now your living standarts are comparable and you still have much more beautiful country.
I am surely coming back to Greece, wish you all the best friends down there!
Known_Week_158 on
Is this the magic thing that will fix all of Greece’s problems? No, because there is no magic fix.
There’s going to be a massive amount of small steps and stuff like this is going to be a part of it. If something goes wrong – and something inevitably will because the last quarter of a century hasn’t exactly been peaceful and stable – and it’ll likely stay that way, it’ll mean Greece can respond far better because it can get more loans at better rates.
It’s also a sign to investors that the Greek economy is more reliable.
10 commenti
Lol
Congratulations and I wish you the best, hope Greece can become a success phoenix story and act as a model for other nations
poli kala!
Only three more years of starving.
mister panos was right, greeks were only resting.
Every time a “success story” about Greece comes up it is for the macro-economy. Nothing ever about the average person living here.
We (THE PEOPLE) were supposed to see benefits from the severe austerity measures we took, starting in 2020, we are more than halfway to 2030 and we are in a worse situation than we were both when the crisis started in 2010 and at the peak of austerity measures in 2016.
– We have the 2nd (soon to be 1st) worst purchasing power in europe
– our true wages (including inflation) are reduced almost 20% since 2010
– we pay almost 2/3 of our wage for rent
– 27% of people living near or under the poverty line (21% in 2010 and 23.5% in 2016)
– 33% child poverty (lack of clothing and not full/complete meals)
– 60% of people reported they had inadequate heating during the winter
– we never recovered from the brain drain (the educated people never came back)
– we still only have tourism and even at that we are bad at it efficiency wise (people leave way less money here than in other countries, we spent way to much compared to more succesful countries etc)
– we have the most corrupt government we ever had in our history since 74′ which actively raids and loots our national – and European for that matter – resources (EE should really stop sending money if they cant get a prosecution when we embezzle funds and abuse the subsidies)
– the same incompetent fools have invested in nothing for the betterment of infrastructure or anything really, and we are basically gonna hit another crisis in 2-3years from now.
But yes we will get an A rating on a made up list of debt based nonsense.
REJOICE people of Greece, we eating CAKE.
International banks can’t wait to give more loans to Greece.
I was in Greece few weeks back for the first time and i was pleasantly surprised, the country look much better than Slovakia, seems money is invested in infrastructure – new airport, metro in Thessaloniki. Cheap transport, great people, ok prices, everybody speaks English, history everywhere, sea and mountains and also very safe country.
Cheer up a little my fellow Greeks, i will say, that ordinary Greek is still better off than a Slovak/Hungarian/other balkan countries. You atleast lived decently pre-2010 compared to these countries , and even now your living standarts are comparable and you still have much more beautiful country.
I am surely coming back to Greece, wish you all the best friends down there!
Is this the magic thing that will fix all of Greece’s problems? No, because there is no magic fix.
There’s going to be a massive amount of small steps and stuff like this is going to be a part of it. If something goes wrong – and something inevitably will because the last quarter of a century hasn’t exactly been peaceful and stable – and it’ll likely stay that way, it’ll mean Greece can respond far better because it can get more loans at better rates.
It’s also a sign to investors that the Greek economy is more reliable.
Greek pay dembts.