Free

Ships, trains halted as Greek workers strike over pay

By Renee Maltezou
Updated April 17 2024 - 7:15pm, first published 7:13pm
Ships stayed docked at Greek ports and train services were halted as workers protested rising costs. (AP PHOTO)
Ships stayed docked at Greek ports and train services were halted as workers protested rising costs. (AP PHOTO)

Ships have remained docked at Greek ports and train services were halted as transport workers joined a 24-hour strike by private workers to demand higher pay to cope with rising living costs.

Bus and taxi drivers also walked off the job for a few hours on Wednesday as part of the labour action called by Greece's largest private sector union GSEE.

Road traffic was disrupted in central Athens as hundreds of striking workers rallied outside the parliament to protest over wages that still lag behind those of their European colleagues.

Since a 2010-18 debt crisis when wages were slashed as part of painful austerity in turn for three international bailouts, Greece's economy has been growing at nearly twice the euro zone rate and the country in 2023 regained investment grade status after 13 years in the "junk" category.

The monthly minimum gross wage was raised by 6.4 per cent to 830 euros ($A1370) in April, the fourth such rise in five years, but workers say the pay rises are not enough to keep up with rising food and housing costs.

"The high prices are eating up any minimum wage increase," a senior GSEE official Nikos Kioutsoukis told Reuters.

"We cannot pay for another crisis, we cannot continue like this, we want real wages increases."

The Greek average monthly salary of 1175 euros is 20 per cent lower than 15 years ago, while unemployment remains above 10 per cent, the second highest in the European Union behind Spain.

The conservative government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, which won re-election last June, has promised to raise the monthly minimum wage to 950 euros by 2027, when its term ends, and increase the average wage by more than 25 per cent to 1500 euros in the same period.

Australian Associated Press