Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou tests the strength of his parliamentary majority today as lawmakers vote on a property tax that is key to averting default and the U.S. criticizes European leaders for moving too slowly to stem the debt crisis.

Papandreou will dine with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin as lawmakers in Athens debate the measure, an amendment to a bill to ratify the overhaul of the European Financial Stability Facility. Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos has told Greeks they face economic collapse if they don't plug a budget deficit that is exceeding targets.

President Barack Obama underscored the urgency late yesterday when he said European governments are "trying to take responsible actions, but those actions haven't been quite as quick as they need to be." His treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, said Europe has "not very much time" to act.

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Concerns that Europe's debt crisis may plunge the global economy into recession dominated weekend talks of policy makers, investors and bankers in Washington, where the International Monetary Fund and World Bank held their annual meetings. Geithner called on euro-area leaders to beef up the capacity of their 440 billion-euro ($594 billion) bailout fund, warning that failure to act threatened "cascading default, bank runs and catastrophic risk."

 
Stocks Rally
European stocks rallied for a third straight day as investors bet as policy makers will heed the warnings to step up their efforts. The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index climbed as much as 2.4 percent today.

With 154 votes in the 300-seat chamber, Papandreou needs to rally his Pasok socialist lawmakers as he did in June to push through budget cuts and asset sales. Three months after that vote, which cost Papandreou two of his deputies, a deepening slump forced him to impose additional cuts and the real-estate levy affecting owners of 5 million homes and stores. The debate is scheduled to start at 6 p.m.

"The parliamentary votes on the required measures will be close," said Wolfango Piccoli, an analyst in London at Eurasia Group. "Some Pasok deputies could resign ahead of the crucial voting sessions, but the government is expected to secure the parliamentary approval for the necessary laws and the release of the 8 billion-euro loan."

Greece faces a "moment of truth" and has to fully implement its savings plans in order to qualify for the next installment of international aid, European Commission spokesman Amadeu Altafaj told reporters in Brussels yesterday.

 
Vote Delayed
He said that euro-area ministers are unlikely to approve the payment at their Oct. 3 meeting as originally planned. Greece has said it needs the money next month.

Venizelos, who holds a midday press conference in Athens today, has announced an additional 20 percent wage cut, on top of 15 percent for the civil service and 25 percent in the wider public sector. Pensions are being reduced 4 percent on average, in addition to previous cuts of 10 percent. A lowering of the tax-free threshold to 5,000 euros will mean higher taxes for all Greeks.

The two most contentious issues are a property tax to be levied via electricity bills, which will provide an annual yield of 1.1 percent of gross domestic product, and plans to put 30,000 public servants into a "reserve" system on reduced pay. The latter measure may not need renewed parliamentary approval as it was part of measures passed in June.

 
Tax Opposed
More than 74 percent of 1,002 Greeks polled by Rass for To Paron newspaper opposed the property tax. The poll also showed that 59 percent believed Papandreou's government won't be able to avert a default. The survey had a 3.1 percentage point margin of error. Papandreou's government trails the opposition party in all polls.

Unions have already called general strikes for Oct. 5 and Oct. 19, while public transit companies including the subway in the Greek capital have held strikes over the past few days to oppose the measures.

"Implementation of the measures is the biggest challenge for the government as the trade unions and parts of the civil service will mount significant resistance, raising the risk of inertia and inaction," said Piccoli.

Bloomberg News

 

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