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Greece Plans Further Minimum Wage Rise amid Iran War Pressure

ATHENS, March 26 (Reuters) - Greece will raise its gross monthly minimum wage by 4.5% from April, the sixth rise in four years, it ​said on Thursday, as it seeks to restore living ‌standards battered by a decade-long financial crisis and shield consumers from rising energy costs amid the Iran conflict.

Greece is recovering strongly from a 2009-2018 ​debt crisis that wiped out nearly a fourth of its ​output and slashed pensions and wages as part of ⁠austerity in exchange for 290 billion euros ($335 billion) in bailout ​loans.

The centre-right government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who won a ​second term in 2023, has cut taxes and social security contributions and increased the minimum salary for full-time employees five times since 2022 as it ​targets a minimum monthly salary of 950 euros by 2027.

But ​purchasing power in the country still trails the European average and is taking ‌a ⁠fresh blow from surging energy prices stemming from the ongoing U.S.-Israeli war with Iran and fueling inflation.

Greece has imposed a cap on profit margins on fuel and some supermarket goods and last ​week announced subsidies for fuel ​and fertilizers and ⁠ferry ticket discounts.

"To further support the people, we will jointly decide today a new rise in ​the minimum wage from April 1," Mitsotakis told ​a cabinet ⁠meeting on Thursday. He said his labour minister will propose that the gross monthly minimum wage be increased to 920 euros from ⁠880 ​euros from April 1.

The government consults employers ​and employees before setting the minimum wage which needs cabinet approval to take effect.

($1 = ​0.8649 euros)

Reporting by Angeliki Koutantou and Renee Maltezou Editing by Keith Weir

Source: Reuters


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