Ο Έλληνας υπουργός βρέθηκε στη 19η και τελευταία θέση του καταλόγου. Στις επιμέρους κατηγορίες της κατάταξης, καταλαμβάνει την τελευταία θέση στους τομείς της οικονομίας και της αξιοπιστίας, αλλά ανεβαίνει στο 180 σκαλί όσον αφορά στην πολιτική. Η οικονομική εφημερίδα τον θεωρεί υπεύθυνο για την ψυχρότητα που επήλθε στις σχέσεις της ελληνικής κυβέρνησης με την τρόικα, ύστερα από τη θνησιγενή απόπειρα αναδιαπραγμάτευσης του Μνημονίου, τον περασμένο Σεπτέμβριο. Στο σχετικό δημοσίευμα αναφέρεται ότι επί υπουργίας του υλοποιήθηκαν λιγοστές μεταρρυθμίσεις, παρά την ψήφιση σχετικών νόμων, ενώ η απόκλιση από τους στόχους του προϋπολογισμού για το έλλειμμα αποδίδεται στις καθυστερήσεις στη δομική αναδιάρθρωση του φορολογικού συστήματος. Οι Financial Times χαρακτηρίζουν τον Ευαγ. Βενιζέλο δραστήριο και φιλόδοξο, σημειώνοντας όμως με φλεγματικό τρόπο ότι λέγεται πως δεν του αρέσουν οι λεπτομέρειες -όπως είναι οι αριθμοί.
November 22, 2011 10:00 pm
FT ranking of EU finance ministers: Striker amid stumblers
By Ralph Atkins and Andrew Whiffin
Traumatic year tests resourcefulness of the continent’s Treasury chiefs
In public finances as in football, each European country fields its own team. In the past year, the lack of unity has been keenly felt, with the escalating debt crisis exacerbated by rivalries and disputes between Treasury departments. Little wonder the rest of the world asks who is playing on which side.In the sixth ranking of European Union finance ministers, the Financial Times attempted to select a player of the year from the bloc’s 19 main economies. We looked at how on the ball each minister was and whether they were team players; we counted their own goals, set them targets for economic performance and measured the response to them from that toughest of crowds – the capital markets. With the continent on the brink of recession, its banks weakened, bond markets in turmoil and investors questioning the euro’s survival, the pressure could hardly have been greater.
Commentators have had plenty to criticise. “Sensible solutions to the eurozone debt crisis were repeatedly thwarted by parochial and procrastinating politics,” says Sony Kapoor, head of Re-Define, an economic consultancy, and one of the seven-strong jury who ranked ministers’ political skills. The candidates “were collectively negligent in allowing a tractable crisis to spiral out of control”.
Robert Bergqvist, chief economist at SEB bank in
In the event,
Disappointed ministers can cry foul. The judging is inevitably subjective – and is not meant to be taken too seriously. Rating
But the league table captures the drama of the past 12 months.
Struggling at the bottom – like his economy – is
But keep watching: just as in global sports championships, fortunes can change – unpredictably – from one season to the next.
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The political aspect is based on the opinions of seven leading economists who judged the ministers on three criteria: their lucidity, or how well they understood events; their impact on the European stage; and their effectiveness at home.
The economic ranking was modified this year to reflect changes in the demands on finance ministers and their economic stewardship. It was based on seven performance measures: recovery in terms of gross domestic product compared with the pre-crisis peak; growth this year; deficit levels and the change since 2009; debt levels; projected change in unemployment from 2008 to 2013; and, finally, deviation of the country’s current account from balance.
Market credibility is judged by the current yield on outstanding 10-year bonds, as well as an assessment of how this yield has changed.
Evangelos Venizelos
A former professor of constitutional law, he took over after a cabinet reshuffle in June. Relations with the international officials who oversee the implementation of reforms linked to the eurozone member’s current €110bn ($149.1bn) bail-out grew frosty when he attempted to renegotiate the deal agreed with his predecessor.
Though legislation has been passed, few reforms have been implemented during his time in office. As a result of lagging revenue collection and delays in launching a structural reform of the tax system, Greece will miss this year’s budget deficit target by a projected 1.5 -2 percentage points of gross domestic product.
Energetic and ambitious (but said not to like details – especially figures) Evangelos Venizelos nonetheless failed in his bid this month to replace George Papandreou as premier. However, he will go on running the economy until next February’s elections, after being named to serve in an appointed coalition government.
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