Greek primary budget surplus beats target in January-November period

December 17, 2025 4:21 AM EST

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis speaks at the Greek parliament as parliament votes on the 2026 budget, in Athens, Greece, December 16, 2025. REUTERS/Louiza Vradi

Dec 17 (Reuters) - ⁠Greece recorded ⁠a ‍central government primary budget surplus of 12.65 billion ‍euros ($14.8 billion) in the 11 months ​to the end of November, beating ​a targeted surplus of 7.70 billion euros, provisional data from the finance ministry showed ​on Wednesday.

The primary surplus, which excludes debt-servicing costs, was driven ​by higher tax revenues and transfers, while spending ‌remained below projected levels.

Tax revenues reached 64.97 billion euros in ​the period, about ⁠330 million euros above target, while expenditures were 2.64 ‌billion euros below target at 63.61 billion.

Interest payments were slightly higher ‌than anticipated at 7.61 billion euros, but ‌did not offset the primary result.

Greece has recovered from a debilitating 2009-2018 financial ‍crisis and has overshot its fiscal targets, partly thanks ⁠to robust receipts from tackling tax evasion and expanding electronic payments.

($1 = 0.8542 euros)

(Reporting by Antonis Pothitos; Editing by Hugh Lawson)



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