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Government aims to shrink budget deficit to 1.4% by 2017

Government aims to shrink budget deficit to 1.4% by 2017With all kinds of forecasts and promises emerging from yesterday’s Council of Ministers, the bottom line is that yet again the government has kicked thoughts of a Brussels-led ‘Plan B’ into the long grass.

All kinds of ideas and reforms have now been ‘approved’ and it remains to see whether European moneymen will share the optimism echoed by president Marcelo, who has called the government’s Stability Programme “very sensible, very prudent and very realistic”.

The programme, along with the national reforms plan, were passed unanimously in an upbeat mood, with national and international media concentrating on different aspects.

Top of the agenda for Bloomberg is the fact that “Portugal’s government aims to shrink its budget deficit to 1.4% by 2017”.

From last year’s excessive 4.4%, financial forecasts are for 2.2% this year - with economic growth reaching 1.8% and steadily growing until 2o20, by which time it should be at 2.1%.

Talking to SIC television news, prime minister António Costa stressed that “rigorous management of public spending” will help Portugal reduce its deficit without the need to cut public workers’ pay or increase direct taxes.

Público quotes president Marcelo saying it’s “fundamental” that Brussels now gives the government plans the green light.

“We’ll know in May,” he told journalists - referring to the Council of Ministers’ approval of the stability programme as a “start of life and a positive sign for the times ahead”.

So what are the bottom lines of the programmes approved yesterday:

National tabloid Correio da Manhã runs with the headline: “Government to give bonuses to civil servants” - but the truth of the matter is that the government is carefully reducing its public sector payroll by adopting the policy of hiring only one member of staff for every two that leave.

It is not a move that has been universally welcomed - particularly by managers and unions in the health and education sectors - but it is to stay in place until 2017.

In 2018, the plan is to hire three people for every four that leave; in 2019, four for every five and only in 202o will the State return to hiring one new member of staff for every civil servant who leaves.

The strategy promises to save the State as much as €1.7 billion , says CM.

Elsewhere, there will be changes to “help low income families” coming in 2018, and tweaks to the way IMI rates are charged.

CM explains “a progressive mechanism” is to be introduced, to calculate IMI from a new perspective, dependant on the property owners “global wealth”.

“The idea is that those who have the most money support a higher tax” relieving those who may have a house, but have “more modest earnings”.

The rates’ changes will also create incentives “to use the productivity of the soil”, says CM and benefit people who rent out.

But one of the largest unknowns is when this new IMI mechanism will start coming into effect.

Nonetheless, both António Costa and his finance minister Mário Centeno affirm: “There is no need for extraordinary measures. Not today, nor tomorrow.”

Indeed Centeno has gone so far as to say: “There will not be any increase in taxes for businesses, no increases in IVA and no cuts to pensions.”

But right wingers are determined to show how they feel about the plans.

Former prime minister Pedro Passos Coelho said yesterday that growth forecasts were “too modest” to pay Portugal’s debts, while the CDS is calling for a vote to be taken on the Stability Programme in parliament.

Article by kind permission of http://portugalresident.com

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Comments  

+2 #3 Maximillian 2016-04-23 12:10
We hear a lot about forecasts and about plans.
I'd rather hear about achievements! ;-)
+1 #2 Mildred 2016-04-23 09:32
Portugal is still carrying far too much 'self inflicted baggage'. Excessive neurosis from the wildly misleading Salazar era history books that its current living generations learnt from. Generations must die out before change is possible. In every aspect of Portuguese life the attitude is just plain wrong to grow its way to becoming a successful modern economy suitable for functioning in the EU.

Just look at the weekly announcements of law enforcers still managing or participating in crime - not just turning their eyes away from it. Operation Achilles involves senior PJ officers running for years a nationwide Drugs importing and distribution business with the Columbian Mafia. The threat of a contract killing on a mule forcing it out into the open.

So the first elite Portuguese 'Internal Affairs' Police as always for an earner, tip off the PJ colleague. Oddly seen as honourable in their warped minds. He is then recorded, presumably by the more developed Columbian DEA, telling his druggy business team he is going silent. Another oft quoted example of so many- ex-PM Socrates getting tipped off so having months to 'bury his bone deeper'.

Bear in mind improving the Portuguese Judicial and Policing system, vital for any economy, still has generations of evolution to go through. Distorted by the Portuguese mentality of doing the opposite of what makes sense. So we must next look forward to numerous wild car chases over the years of "Criminals chasing Cops".
+4 #1 liveaboard 2016-04-22 23:09
There are 2 routes out of this sort of debt trap; Growth or bankruptcy.
A country can not 'shrink' itself out of debt with continuously decreased spending coupled with increased taxes.
Reducing the bloated government payroll is a good idea, but reducing medical staff of a state run system with an ageing population will not help anyone.
Patients least of all.
Shrink red tape, bureaucracy, and corruption.
Don't shrink the economy, unless the plan is bankruptcy.

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