Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
In liberalized Greek workplace, dancers swirl freely
|
Edition:
U.S.
Article
Comments (0)
Full Focus
Editor's choice
A selection of our top photos from the past 48 hours. Full Article
Follow Reuters
Facebook
Twitter
RSS
YouTube
Read
Universal pulls plug on Stephen King's "The Dark Tower"
18 Jul 2011
News of the World Whisteblower Found Dead
18 Jul 2011
Minnesota grinds budget details to end shutdown
18 Jul 2011
Special report: Banks continue robo-signing
18 Jul 2011
Perry signs bill allowing Texas healthcare "compact"
18 Jul 2011
Discussed
101
Obama asks lawmakers to gauge support for debt deal
60
Fallback plan gains momentum in debt talks
60
Obama eyes more deficit talks with no deal in sight
Watched
Flying sphere goes where man fears to tread
Thu, Jul 14 2011
Pakistan Taliban releases video of mass execution
Mon, Jul 18 2011
Japan's winning team returns home
Mon, Jul 18 2011
In liberalized Greek workplace, dancers swirl freely
Tweet
Share this
Email
Print
Related News
Euro zone makes fresh bid to tackle Greek crisis
Thu, Jul 14 2011
Europe at impasse on Greece, IMF backs investor role
Wed, Jul 13 2011
Europe considers Greek default, leaders to meet
Tue, Jul 12 2011
Eurozone pledges new steps to help Greece
Mon, Jul 11 2011
EU slams ratings agencies after Portugal downgraded
Wed, Jul 6 2011
Analysis & Opinion
Europe’s banks could cope with a Greek haircut
Athens debt crisis taxes cosy ties between state and Greek Orthodox Church
Related Topics
World »
Greece »
A woman dances in front of the sunset at the port of Aegina island, about 29 km (18 miles) southwest of Athens May 26, 2008. Picture taken May 26, 2008.
Credit: Reuters/Yannis Kolesidis
By Dina Kyriakidou and Renee Maltezou
ATHENS |
Tue Jul 19, 2011 2:16am EDT
ATHENS (Reuters) - If you want to be a dancer in Greece, you can now swirl freely into your new career. But if your heart is set on opening a pharmacy, things are not that easy.
As part of its overhaul of the economy to send investors a message it is making changes to tackle its debt crisis, the Greek government is opening up professions but the jobs market is still far from an even playing field.
Athens has promised international lenders to untangle a web of rules on about 135 "closed" professions, allowing anyone who wants to drive a Greek taxi, open a bakery or guide tourists on the Acropolis to do so without restriction as of July 2.
But in practice, the much-touted liberalization has so far been limited, with the government bowing to the demands of powerful unions and keeping regulations on many sectors.
"Ballets and dancing schools have been liberalized but more complicated professions such as civil engineers, pharmacists and lawyers have not opened at all," Yannis Stournaras, head of the IOBE think-tank, told Reuters. "The political system resists."
IOBE estimates a complete opening up of professions would benefit the economy by 17 percent of GDP in the long run.
"The problem is that the law that liberalizes a profession passes through parliament and then the implementation law includes such complicated rules and regulations that it is effectively not open," Stournaras said.
In place for decades to protect professions from internal and foreign competition, the controls must be lifted to boost lagging Greek competitiveness and meet strict conditions set by the EU and IMF in exchange for handing Greece a 110-billion-euro lifeline last year to avoid bankruptcy.
After a rocky start with the raucous truck drivers' union, whose walkouts and protests caused fuel and other shortages last year, the government has effectively watered down measures.
POLICIES MUDDLED, WATERED DOWN
Sectors such as sea-faring are already suffering from rising unemployment, seen reaching 17 percent this year, as Greece plunges into its deepest recession in 40 years.
Facing almost daily protests, sometimes violent, from a public incensed with lender-prescribed austerity and declining popularity, the government is struggling to balance social stability with tough reforms needed to turn the economy around.
But the strikes are damaging. Taxi drivers staged a 48-hour strike from Monday this week to protest against the deregulation of the sector which relaxes the licensing process for drivers, some of whom paid up to 200,000 euros for a permit.
They blocked access to the Athens airport and main port of Piraeus, causing flight delays and affecting 10 cruise ships and about 16,000 tourists at the height of the summer season.
Controls are widespread across a variety of sectors. On the ancient Athens Acropolis, a Greek tour guide often stands silently next to a Japanese guide lecturing his compatriots in their native tongue about the glory that was Greece.
A 1977 law allows only licensed tour guides to operate in Greece, so foreign visitors must have a guide for their own language plus a Greek guide to comply with the rules, which if broken carry a penalty of one year in jail and a 2,000-euro fine. The practice remains in place despite liberalization laws.
But even where the law was meant to free up a sector, such as pharmacies, the government cut a deal instead of truly freeing the profession from strict zoning rules, fixed drug prices and regulated opening times.
After intensive talks and strikes, the Health Ministry agreed to open 300 pharmacies on top of the existing 12,000 in exchange for a discount on drug prices.
Pharmacists are still not pleased. They say they can't face even the competition of a few hundred more shops while the state, whose health funds and hospitals make up 80 percent of their business, does not pay its debts.
"The state hasn't paid us since January," Constantine Lourantos, head of the Attika region pharmacists' union told Reuters. "One fund hasn't paid since 2008. State debts may well be up to half a billion euros."
The government said it was premature to criticize its reforms and that it was committed to liberalizing professions.
"The deadline expired on July 2. Isn't it a bit early to evaluate the result? All restrictions have been lifted by law and there are only some left for bailiffs and some medical professions," said a finance ministry official, who requested anonymity.
NO FREE SAILING
But industry officials say the government's half-hearted approach is already costing Greece, especially in the lucrative cruise ship business, a main contributor to tourism that makes up nearly 20 percent of GDP.
In an archaic system called "cabotage," non-EU flagged cruise ships could not moor overnight at Greece's ports and white-washed islands unless they had Greek-only crews.
In practice, even EU-flagged ships followed the system just to avoid protests despite the high costs involved.
When the government tried to lift cabotage last summer, seamen's unions blocked ports and turned some ships away. But ensuing legal changes have made it almost equally difficult for ships to sail around the azure Aegean waters freely.
"The new law requires contracts with conditions that don't apply anywhere else in the world. To put it simply, the law is not applied in practice," said Michalis Nomikos, head of Donomis, the port agent for cruise ship companies, including the Royal Caribbean group.
Nomikos said the state is now burying cruise companies in bureaucracy, demanding company charters, three-year contracts describing exactly which islands they will visit, and other paperwork equivalent to setting up a company in Greece.
The restrictions are turning off companies which prefer other Mediterranean destinations, costing Greece about one billion euros in revenues a year, he added.
Analysts and industry officials said Greece won't be able to protect professions for much longer, as it undergoes regular inspections by the so-called "troika" before every EU/IMF loan installment is granted.
The inspectors said in their latest review that although some steps had been taken, the reform was not complete and further progress was needed.
"The troika has realized what is going on and it's a lot stricter. The government has been given until 2012 to truly liberalize professions," Stournaras said.
(Writing by Dina Kyriakidou; Editing by Peter Millership)
World
Greece
Tweet this
Link this
Share this
Digg this
Email
Reprints
We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/
Comments (0)
Be the first to comment on reuters.com.
Add yours using the box above.
Social Stream (What's this?)
© Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters
Editorial Editions:
Africa
Arabic
Argentina
Brazil
Canada
China
France
Germany
India
Italy
Japan
Latin America
Mexico
Russia
Spain
United Kingdom
United States
Reuters
Contact Us
Advertise With Us
Help
Journalism Handbook
Archive
Site Index
Video Index
Reader Feedback
Mobile
Newsletters
RSS
Podcasts
Widgets
Your View
Analyst Research
Thomson Reuters
Copyright
Disclaimer
Privacy
Professional Products
Professional Products Support
Financial Products
About Thomson Reuters
Careers
Online Products
Acquisitions Monthly
Buyouts
Venture Capital Journal
International Financing Review
Project Finance International
PEhub.com
PE Week
FindLaw
Super Lawyers Attorney Rating Service
Reuters on Facebook
Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.
NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.
Other News on Tuesday, 19 July 2011 Manuel overdrive: Phillies headed toward 100-win mark
New Republican budget plan seeks deeper cuts as deficit deadline approaches
Study: Almost half of mild Alzheimer's patients suffer from apathy and depression
Charlie Sheen returns to television with "Anger Management"
Wendy Williams to embark on "Say It Like You Mean It" tour
Dispute between Somali leaders delays cabinet nominations
Second top cop resigns in U.K. phone hacking scandal
Chinese police, rioters clash in Xinjiang; 4 killed
Bangladesh teacher fired in Mohammed row
On financial thin ice: Maple Leafs practice facility taken over by city
U.S. urges Gaddafi to go as rebels claim oil town
|
Assad loyalists kill 10 in attacks in Homs
|
Springsteen surprises fans during Clemons Tribute
In liberalized Greek workplace, dancers swirl freely
|
Birth Control Without Copays Could Become Mandatory
Egyptian PM taken to hospital, new cabinet delayed
|
Health Law Bolsters Funding For In-School Clinics
Astronauts bid space station goodbye
Beckham, Donovan, Henry highlight MLS All-Star roster
China's heir apparent pledges tough line on Tibet
|
Lily Allen's store is doing fine despite reports
China blames terrorists for attack in Xinjiang: report
|
Betty White is latest to be invited to Marine Corps Ball
Bette Midler accuses Lady Gaga of stealing routine
Cabrera, Huff lead Indians past Twins in opener of doubleheader
Pakistani workers of U.S. aid agency feared kidnapped
|
IBM's services signings surge, stock rises
|
Apple set to wow investors, outlook eyed
|
Cisco to cut workforce by 15 percent, sell factory to Hon Hai
|
China Web users hit 485 million
|
Hackers breach Murdoch's Sun newspaper website
|
Microsoft seals record year, stock still stuck
|
China's Baidu signs music deal with studios, ends legal wrangle
|
Kodak did not infringe on Apple patents, says ITC
|
Chip outlook down on economy, PC sales, inventories
|
EBay's marketplace turnaround gains momentum
|
Charlie Sheen gets his Anger Management on TV show
|
Harry Potter debut box office inches higher
|
Handover of key city tests Afghan forces amid rising violence
|
Israeli navy seizes Gaza-bound yacht
|
Iran says installing new nuclear centrifuges
|
U.N. set to declare famine in parts of Somalia
|
NGOs in standoff over Hamas audit demand
Tunisia gas pipe hit by blast but still working
|
Mets star shortstop Jose Reyes returns after stint on 15-day DL
Peru's Congress approves bill to pay land bonds
|
Great trek for water in the south
Afghan, Pakistan presidents meet amid new tensions
|
Michelle Obama to appear on 'Extreme Makeover: Home Edition'
Egypt cabinet to be sworn in on PM's return: sources
|
Hawass is gone, leaving Egyptian antiquities in crisis
Egyptian women demand greater role in government
Emma Watson says she'll return to Brown University
'Glee' to release first live album
Nepal to determine height of Mt. Everest on its own
Ready for some football? NFL, players close to new deal
Frustrated judge pushes Google digital book deal
|
Basic Nokia phones more profitable than smartphones
|
Murdoch newspapers tighten computer security after hack
|
FDA plans oversight of some mobile medical apps
|
Adele up against two past winners for Mercury Prize
|
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights