PASOK MP Pavlos Christidis gave his own response to the claims of the Minister of Health, Mr. Adoni Georgiadis, about what PASOK received financially in 1981, the first government of Andreas Papandreou of ND and what it delivered in a center-right faction from 1989.
Mr. Christidis cites a range of financial data, significantly emphasizing to Mr. Georgiadis that “if necessary, we have data for later.”
Paulo’s post in detail
“Because I saw that the Vice President of ND Mr. Adonis Georgiadis, on the anniversary of PASOK’s victory in 1981, remembered the economic data of the 80s, we will present what Andreas’ first government received from those of ND, and what it delivered in 89: In 1981, the PASOK Government received from ND:
-Public debt at 27% of GDP
-negative GDP rate -1.6%
-inflation in 1980 24.9% and in 1981 24.5%.
• In 1988 it had a high GDP with a growth rate of +4.3%, with a Public Debt of 61.5% of GDP and an inflation of 13.5%.
• In June 1989, the economy got a boost with a positive and high GDP, a GDP growth rate of +3.8% and inflation of 13.7%.
And if necessary, we have data for later.”
Because I saw that the Vice-President of ND Mr. @AdonisGeorgiadi On the anniversary of PASOK’s victory in 1981, we recalled the economic data from the 80s, let’s present what Andreas’ first government received from the ND government, and what it delivered in 89:
In 1981 the…
– Pavlos Christidis (@christidisp) October 18, 2024
Georgiadis: The disastrous 80s were the most disastrous decade in recent decades
Earlier today, Georgiadis, speaking to Action24, and referring to the 43rd anniversary of PASOK’s electoral victory and coming to power, said: “Today is an important anniversary for modern Greek history and post-colonialism, October 18th. Everyone’s point of view. From my point of view, the 80s were a disastrous decade, without a doubt. Greece entered the decade with a very low debt-to-GDP ratio. He left deindustrialized. He entered with good public administration and meritocracy, he left with branches and “green guards”. He entered an education, which had order and organization, and left with the chaos that we still have today.”
“I think the 80s, which we still experience today, were certainly the most destructive decade in recent decades,” he added.