At revered Black school, Biden leans into faith and tells grads he hears voices of dissent
NATION-WORLD

Greece OKs cuts to head off default

Staff Writer
Athens Banner-Herald
Petros Giannakouris/AP
A Greek protester prepares to hit riot police with a stick during clashes Wednesday in Central Athens.

ATHENS, Greece — Greece fended off a bankruptcy that would have roiled global markets and threatened the future of the euro when lawmakers on Wednesday backed controversial austerity measures in the face of violent protests. More than 100 people were injured in riots.

Investors cheered the bill — which aims to cut spending and raise taxes by $40 billion and raise $71 billion in privatizations over five years — but, in Athens, the mood was dark. In a haze of tear gas, protesters hurled anything they could find at riot police and tried to blockade the Parliament building.

A Greek default would threaten the viability of the euro, the EU’s common currency, and send shock waves through global markets similar to those that kicked off the global financial meltdown after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

While world markets rose on the news that the bill passed, Greece is not yet out of the woods. The bill — along with another that must be passed today on implementing the austerity package — will release the next $17 billion installment of a $157 billion international bailout from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. Eurogroup head Jean-Claude Juncker indicated after the vote that Greece would get the fifth batch of its bailout loans.

But many Greeks complain they have already paid dearly in a year that has seen public sector salaries and pensions cut and unemployment rise to above 16 percent.

“This is bad, the country will be sold for a piece of bread,” said Dimitris Kostopoulos, a 48-year-old insurer who was protesting Wednesday. “There were many other more appropriate alternatives to this. Parliament has once again betrayed us.”