European Union states decided on Monday to close
disciplinary procedures against Greece over its excessive deficit after
improvements in Greece’s fiscal position, confirming the country’s
recovery is on the right track.
The move,
although largely symbolic, sends a new signal that Greece’s public
finances are again under control, facilitating the country’s plans to
tap markets after a successful issue of bonds in July which ended a
three-year exile.
EU fiscal rules oblige member
states to keep their budget deficits below 3 percent of their economic
output or face sanctions that could entail hefty fines, although so far
no country has received a financial penalty.
Greece
had a 0.7 percent budget surplus in 2016, and is projected to maintain
its fiscal position within EU rules’ limits this year.
“In
the light of this, the Council (of EU states) found that Greece fulfils
the conditions for closing the excessive deficit procedure,” the EU
said in a note.
“After many years of severe
difficulties, Greece’s finances are in much better shape. Today’s
decision is therefore welcome”, Estonia’s finance minister Toomas
Toniste said.
The EU states’ decision confirmed
a proposal by the EU executive commission in July to end the
disciplinary procedure for Greece.
But
he stressed that Greece still needs to positively exit its bailout
programme which ends in August after a third review of the country’s
reforms by international creditors.

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