Decision 2004/917 - 2004/917/EC: Council Decision of 5 July 2004 on the existence of an excessive deficit in Greece

Please note

This page contains a limited version of this dossier in the EU Monitor.

1.

Current status

This decision was in effect until July  2, 2007 and should have been implemented in national regulation on December 30, 2004 at the latest.

2.

Key information

official title

2004/917/EC: Council Decision of 5 July 2004 on the existence of an excessive deficit in Greece
 
Legal instrument Decision
Number legal act Decision 2004/917
Original proposal SEC(2004)815 EN
CELEX number i 32004D0917

3.

Key dates

Document 05-07-2004
Publication in Official Journal 30-12-2004; OJ L 389 p. 25-26
Effect 30-12-2004; Takes effect Date notif.
End of validity 02-07-2007; Repealed by 32007D0465
Notification 30-12-2004; {titleAndReference.draft.disclaimer.new|http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/fd_365/titleAndReference.draft.disclaimer.new}

4.

Legislative text

30.12.2004   

EN

Official Journal of the European Union

L 389/25

 

COUNCIL DECISION

of 5 July 2004

on the existence of an excessive deficit in Greece

(2004/917/EC)

THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,

Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community, and in particular Article 104(6) thereof,

Having regard to the recommendation from the Commission,

Having regard to the observations made by Greece,

Whereas:

 

(1)

According to Article 104 of the Treaty Member States are to avoid excessive government deficits.

 

(2)

The Stability and Growth Pact is based on the objective of sound government finances as a means of strengthening the conditions for price stability and for strong sustainable growth conducive to employment creation.

 

(3)

The excessive deficit procedure under Article 104 provides for a decision on the existence of an excessive deficit; the Protocol on the excessive deficit procedure annexed to the Treaty sets out further provisions relating to the implementation of the excessive deficit procedure. Council Regulation (EC) No 3605/93 of 22 November 1993 on the application of the Protocol on the excessive deficit procedure annexed to the Treaty establishing the European Community (1) lays down detailed rules and definitions for the application of the provisions of the said Protocol.

 

(4)

Article 104(5) of the Treaty requires the Commission to address an opinion to the Council if the Commission considers that an excessive deficit in a Member State exists or may occur. The Commission addressed such an opinion on Greece to the Council on 24 June 2004. Having examined all relevant factors taken into account in its report in accordance with Article 104(3) and having regard to the opinion of the Economic and Financial Committee in accordance with Article 104(4), the Commission concluded in its opinion on 24 June 2004 that there exists an excessive deficit in Greece.

 

(5)

Article 104(6) of the Treaty lays down that the Council should consider any observations which the Member State concerned may wish to make before deciding, after an overall assessment, whether an excessive deficit exists.

 

(6)

The overall assessment leads to the following conclusions: the general government deficit reached 3,2 % of GDP in 2003 in Greece. The breach of the 3 % of GDP Treaty reference value in 2003 did not result, in the sense of the Stability and Growth Pact, from an unusual event outside the control of the Greek authorities, nor is it the result of a severe economic downturn. On the contrary, it occurred in a context of strong economic growth at 4,2 % in 2003, and a positive output gap of around 1,5 % of GDP. The outturn of the general government deficit in 2003 compares with a target deficit of 0,9 % of GDP set in the December 2002 updated stability programme. According to the Commission, the significant slippage is attributed to extraordinary factors (overruns in expenditure related to the preparation of the Olympic Games and compensation for weather damages), to higher than planned current spending (social transfers and public sector wages) and to a shortfall of revenues (VAT, income taxes and reclassification, as a financial transaction, of a payment from the Saving Postal Bank to government).

 

(7)

According to its spring 2004 forecasts, based on the assumption of no policy change and a deficit figure for 2003 of 2,95 % of GDP notified at the end of March, the Commission projects the general government deficit in Greece to reach 3,2 % of GDP in 2004.

 

(8)

The debt-to-GDP ratio reached 103 % of GDP in 2003, well above the 60 % reference value of the Treaty. Moreover, in its Spring 2004 forecasts, the Commission projects the debt ratio to decline only marginally to 102,8 % of GDP in 2004, which is above...


More

This text has been adopted from EUR-Lex.

5.

Original proposal

 

6.

Sources and disclaimer

For further information you may want to consult the following sources that have been used to compile this dossier:

This dossier is compiled each night drawing from aforementioned sources through automated processes. We have invested a great deal in optimising the programming underlying these processes. However, we cannot guarantee the sources we draw our information from nor the resulting dossier are without fault.

 

7.

Full version

This page is also available in a full version containing the legal context, de Europese rechtsgrond, other dossiers related to the dossier at hand and the related cases of the European Court of Justice.

The full version is available for registered users of the EU Monitor by ANP and PDC Informatie Architectuur.

8.

EU Monitor

The EU Monitor enables its users to keep track of the European process of lawmaking, focusing on the relevant dossiers. It automatically signals developments in your chosen topics of interest. Apologies to unregistered users, we can no longer add new users.This service will discontinue in the near future.