While  presenting a new package of reforms worth euro23 billion ($33 billion)  through 2015, George Papandreou said the measures were a "patriotic  duty" that would bring about "radical change" in all sectors of the  state.
The measures themselves will be unveiled after Easter, he  said in opening remarks at a Cabinet meeting which were televised live.
Papandreou  insisted that Greece does not intend to restructure its debt, a  possibility markets are increasingly fearing. The country's woes, he  said, "will be addressed in depth. Not by restructuring the debt but  when we restructure the country."
Greece was saved from default  last year with a euro110 billion package of bailout loans from the  International Monetary Fund and EU. In return, it imposed strict  austerity measures last year, including public sector salary and pension  cuts, and broad tax hikes.
Earlier this week, the country's  finance minister said measures would not include any more  across-the-board salary and pension cuts or sweeping tax increases, but  would focus on curbing wasteful spending at state enterprises, limiting  public sector payroll costs and cracking down on tax evasion and the  nonpayment of social security contributions.
"I am totally  resolved to continue this effort and totally confident that it will  succeed," Papandreou said, adding that "the start has been made and now  we have a roadmap for the next stage."
The prime minister said the  government aimed to reduce spending to 44 percent of gross domestic  product by 2015 — which he said was the EU average — from the 53 percent  it stood at in 2009. He expects state revenues, which stood at 38  percent of GDP in 2009, to increase to 43 percent in 2015.
The  levels of revenue and spending would return to those of a few years ago,  when Greece's debt crisis came to the fore.
"None of the targets  we have set are unprecedented," he said. "What is unprecedented is the  effort we are undertaking to clean up a chaotic situation and return to  normality."
Despite repeated government assurances that Greece  does not intend to restructure its debt, many analysts have argued it  will eventually be forced to do so, even if it follows through on all  its pledges.
IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn said late Thursday  that the country would manage — provided it really does implement the  reforms it has pledged.
"It is painful, and I understand how  painful it is for the Greek people," he said. "But, I think Greece will  make it. To do this, we build a program. Of course, this program has to  be implemented."
He stressed that the government, "which was very  bold in implementing a lot of measures during the last year, should not  run out of steam."
On Thursday, the country's borrowing costs rose  sharply, with the yield on 10-year government bonds spiking to over 13  percent for the first time since the country joined the euro in 2001.  The interest rate gap, or spread, between Greece's 10-year bonds and  those of Germany, which are considered the benchmark, rose to above 10  percentage points before dipping just below that level by noon Friday.
The  spike was attributed to comments from German Finance Minister Wolfgang  Schaeuble, who said in an interview with the Die Welt newspaper that  Greece may have to take additional steps to deal with its finances as  soon as June.
Asked if that meant a restructuring, Schaeuble said  any restructuring would have to be agreed voluntarily. European leaders  ruled out losses for bondholders under the current, temporary EU bailout  fund, but will allow such losses, or haircuts, under bailouts from a  new rescue fund that can be tapped from 2013.
by Derek Gatopoulos
source: AP
 

