McKinsey - Greece 10 Years Ahead
McKinsey - Greece 10 Years Ahead
McKinsey - Greece 10 Years Ahead
Section Heading
June 2012
Report #1/15
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Table of contents
Table of Contents
Introduction 5
1. Overview 7
11
15
18
27
27
32
41
43
43
47
50
55
59
64
66
68
70
72
74
76
78
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Introduction
Introduction
Greece 10 Years Ahead is a study that aims to define a new growth model and strategy for economic
development in Greece for the next 5 to 10 years, founded on the principles of competitiveness,
productivity, extroversion, investment stimulation, and employment growth.
To fulfill this purpose, Greece 10 Years Ahead analyzes the structure and development prospects
of key economic sectors, and studies fundamental cross-sector macroeconomic drivers, challenges,
and opportunities of the Greek economy. Thereafter, the study focuses on the five largest (in terms
of Gross Value Added-GVA) production sectors (major sectors) and eight smaller but high potential areas of the economy (rising stars) that have significant potential to fuel the countrys economic
growth in the coming years, clearly recognizing that there might be additional growth opportunities in
other sectors or sub-sectors that have not been covered by Greece 10 Years Ahead.
Greece 10 Years Ahead proposes a new National Growth Model for Greece for the next decade
and outlines a blueprint to reignite growth that contains 20 specific proposals on possible
horizontal (cross-sector) reforms and more than 130 proposals on vertical (sector-specific)
priorities and measures for the Greek state and market participants to consider.
The Greece 10 Years Ahead study was conducted by the Athens Office of McKinsey & Company. It
took place between December 2010 and November 2011 and was jointly sponsored by McKinsey &
Company Inc, the Hellenic Bank Association (HBA) and the Hellenic Federation of Enterprises (SEV).
The outcome of the Greece 10 Years Ahead effort is a completely independent report that solely
reflects the results of analyses conducted and insights gathered and substantiated by McKinsey &
Company.
The end products of the Greece 10 Years Ahead include 15 reports: An Executive Summary,
a Macroeconomic Analysis and horizontal growth reforms report and 13 sector reports: i.e., five
reports on the largest production sectors namely: Retail, Manufacturing/Food Processing, Tourism,
Energy, Agriculture, and eight reports on the rising stars namely: Generic Pharmaceuticals,
Aquaculture, Medical Tourism, Long-term & Elderly Care, Cargo & Logistics Hub (transshipment and
gateway), Waste Management, Graduate Classics Education Hub, and Greek Specialty Foods.
This document is the Executive Summary of the Greece 10 Years Ahead study and contains an
overview of the major conclusions. This Executive Summary can be found on the website of
McKinsey & Company, Athens Office (www.mckinsey.gr).
1. Overview
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Overview
1. Overview
In 2008, Greece entered a deep recession from which it is still struggling to emerge. Private and
public investment has ground to a halt. Public sector debt has increased substantially as the
state had to rely on official support loans to fund social payments, payroll expenses and the fiscal
deficit. In addition to a fiscal and debt crisis, the country is facing competitiveness and employment
challenges. It has lagged its European peers in key measures, such as foreign direct investment (FDI),
productivity and workforce participation. At the same time, the recession is rapidly morphing into a
jobs crisis, with the official unemployment rate already above 21% in the first quarter of 2012.
A combination of economic, political and social factors has contributed to the poor foreign investment,
productivity and employment record. Greece has grown on an unsustainable demand structure, driven
almost entirely by consumption. Between 2000 and 2008, private and public consumption rose by
approximately four percentage points of GDP and accounted for 97% of cumulative GDP generation
for the period, compared with countries like Austria, France, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, and
the Netherlands, where the respective figure was much lower (71% on a weighted-average basis) and
complemented by higher levels of investment.
Greece is chronically suffering from unfavorable conditions for business and investment. It is one of the
most regulated economies in Europe, creating red tape that affects businesses, from the development
of land to the competitive intensity of several regulated markets and professions. A complex
administrative and tax system creates legal and procedural disincentives to operate and expand
businesses while failing to collect an estimated 15-20 billion in annual tax revenue.
As a result, Greece attracts insufficient investment capital to build job-creating businesses. Foreign
inward investment relative to GDP in Greece is just a fraction of the amount flowing to Spain and Italy,
two of the countrys Mediterranean economic rivals in important product and services sectors. This
offers some explanation as to why Greece cannot create or sustain jobs in production sectors of the
economy, such as manufacturing, and must rely instead on imports for many of its needs, contributing to
a 20 billion trade deficit in 2010.
Productivity is lagging across economic sectors (almost 30% lower than EU-15 and 40% lower than
the US). One of the main reasons for the productivity gap is the relative lack of larger-scale enterprises,
which maximize output through economies of scale and scope (e.g., through specialization, focused
investments, and effective knowledge and innovation management). For example, just 27% of
manufacturing firms have more than 250 employees, compared with 34% in the Netherlands and 54% in
Germany.
The recent debt crisis has led to the adoption by Greece of several harsh, multi-billion euro austerity
packages, to urgently tackle its fiscal imbalances as part of the fiscal stabilization program. For Greece,
however, to achieve lasting economic recovery, the implementation of the fiscal stabilization program
needs to be complemented by a robust and sustainable new National Growth Model and strategy.
Greece 10 Years Ahead aims to address precisely this need. It proposes a new National Growth
Model, which could lead within 10 years to the creation of 520,000 new jobs and 49 billion in new
Gross Value Added (55 billion in GDP terms) in the five largest production sectors of the economy
and eight rising star sectors alone. In addition, the impact on Greece's trade and fiscal balance could
be significant. Specifically, we estimate the annual impact on the trade balance of 16-17 billion and of
the fiscal balance of 8-9 billion.
Particularly important under the current economic circumstances is the fact that more than 30-35%
of this impact could materialize within a 5 year horizon, pending effective implementation of the reform
measures.
The new National Growth Model aspires to six changes. First, tradable sectors to get a large share of
resources and investments, allowing them to build scale, expertise and competitiveness at international
level in order for Greece to become more extrovert in producing export goods and services and
importing capital. Second, funding of the economy to transition from public debt to private sector
equity and investment by settingup a truly business-friendly environment. Third, Greece to achieve
a step-change in productivity and efficiency, eliminating redundant public sector entities and
improving public administration efficiency while the private sector builds larger, more extrovert
organizations that better utilize resources, investment capital and technology. Fourth, the country to
materially limit informality, with tax evasion and official corruption rooted out by internationally proven
techniques, minimizing transaction between the private sector and state agencies. Fifth, the country
to develop a new employment culture and opportunities where women and young people are
encouraged to join the workforce, where education is upgraded in both existing and new fields (e.g.,
tourism, agriculture, aquaculture) and where innovation and entrepreneurship are systematically
and institutionally promoted. Finally, a critical prerequisite is that Greece radically improves its public
administration effectiveness and execution capacity, both through better coordination among
entities (e.g., Ministries) and the quality upgrade of managerial capabilities through a substantial infusion
of local and international managerial talent and expertise.
To materialize the new National Growth Model, Greece 10 Years Ahead has defined 20 horizontal
(cross-sector) and more than 130 vertical (sector-specific) possible reforms and measures for the
state and the private sector to consider and act upon.
In terms of horizontal reforms the Greek state should first consider the radical improvement of
its reform coordination and execution capacity. This would involve establishing the Economic
Development and Reform Unit (EDRU) as an independent institution reporting to the Prime Minister
to support the Greek government in planning, coordinating, facilitating, and monitoring the execution
of fiscal adjustment and growth reforms. Moreover, it would be critical to set up a public sector Talent
Placement Office (TPO) to hire and deploy ~200 domestically and internationally accomplished
executives from the private and the public sector into pivotal managerial positions in the Greek public
administration and state-owned enterprises (SoE).
Other horizontal priorities address how Greece could ignite and sustain a growth trajectory, for
instance through a National Liquidity Relief and Growth Fund that would inject lower cost liquidity
to companies using an independent underwriting platform under the supervisory auspices of the Bank
of Greece. Moreover, it is imperative to immediately restore infrastructure and sector investment
flows by unblocking currently stalled growth-relevant infrastructure projects (e.g., large motorways)
and launching 3-4 new growth-critical infrastructure investments (e.g., high speed cargo train, cargo
gateway and transshipment port facilities, 3-4 cruise embarkation ports) and establishing the Greece
10 Years Ahead Investment Fund, starting with private capital from Greece and the diaspora to fund
sector investments. This can be enabled by the revision of the investment fast-track framework,
leveraging proven techniques and practices from the Athens 2004 Olympic Games experience and by
upgrading the role and capabilities of Invest in Greece.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Overview
Finally, in terms of the employment framework, judicial operations and informality it is important to
complete the efficiency-related labor reforms, to accelerate decision making in the Council of State (CoS)
and earlier degree courts (e.g., by introducing a 7th CoS department for strategic investments and
reforms), to immediately introduce internationally proven methodologies in tax evasion detection
and collection (while selectively easing tax pressure and providing incentives in growth areas), to
consolidate all internal public sector auditing functions into one Central State Auditing Unit, and to
establish a Central Procurement Unit for the public sector.
The private sector and local businesses need to develop scale through consolidation, build healthier
and more productive operating models, and be more proactive in promoting Greek-branded products
and services in core export markets. Examples of the possible sector-specific priorities outlined
include making a strategic shift in tourism towards larger, untapped markets such as the US, Russia
and China (while defending core European markets), attracting higher-income visitors, encouraging
investments in large integrated resorts and high-end vacation homes and aggressively pursuing cruises,
yachting & sailing and city break as add-ons to the core sun & beach theme. In energy, there are
major opportunities to reduce energy consumption in buildings, to accelerate productivity improvements
both in power and oil, and to expand Greeces extroversion and participation in the sectors value chain
(e.g., upstream oil & gas, regional power and gas projects). Agriculture and food manufacturing can be
reoriented towards clearly defined priority export markets, where specific food products such as olive oil,
dairy, and selected fresh and processed fruits & vegetables could reach international markets at scale.
Doing so would require the development of 4-6 modern processing facilities throughout Greece and the
setup of a Greek Foods Company to also enable small and medium size players to capture synergies
and gain international market access. In most rising star sectors (e.g., generic pharmaceuticals,
aquaculture, medical tourism), a gradual and growth-minded deregulation coupled with accelerated
consolidation and stronger focus on innovation and operating efficiency could help scale-up these
sectors unique advantages in know-how and resources.
Such moves could have a beneficial spillover effect in other sectors, such as manufacturing,
construction, real estate, and financial services, creating substantial export capacity and FDI flows.
Collectively, this strategic reorientation can create a healthier demand structure in the economy,
benefiting the primary sectors, stimulating investment and creating jobs in manufacturing and heavy
industry, where the alleviation of undue complications and the establishment of a steady and predictable
business environment is the most important requirement for companies to thrive and contribute to
growth and job creation.
This Executive Summary defines the obstacles that Greece needs to overcome to establish the new
National Growth Model. It then outlines this new model in macroeconomic terms and briefly presents
the cross-sector and sector-specific priorities and measures to be considered by the Greek state and
market participants to stimulate growth and employment.
We consider these reforms and measures crucial in the process of moving Greece out of recession and
onto a sustainable economic development path.
10
2.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Greeces unsustainable growth model
11
Exhibit 1
97
15
-12
857
27
82
-9
628
87
17
-4
1,170
17
71
11
2,654
79
20
12
Exhibit 2
x
2001-08 Debt
Even before the crisis, Greeces debt burden was very high,
Volumes CAGR
with public debt and consumer lending being the highest in Europe
Consumer lending
% of GDP, 2008
+25%
18
14
Public debt
10
15
10
+8%
74
236
41
67
64
111
81
Mortgage lending
102
+12%
176 200
214
212
50
42
Private debt
195
140
+26%
77
110
136
+19%
104
33
40
131
Corporate lending
105
60
76
+15%
56
81
20
Despite having joined the EEC already in 1981, Greece never really increased its external orientation and
fully reap economic benefits from membership in such an international community. Exports fell far short
of imports. The bulk of the relatively small investments made were financed primarily by the Greek private
sector through Greek public and private debt. In fact, only 4% of total capital formation between 2000-08
was driven by foreign direct investment. This figure is only a fraction of the European average (Exhibit 3).
Private consumption in Greece was very high almost 20 percentage points of GDP higher than in most
European countries and demand predominantly domestic. Even export-oriented sectors of the economy,
such as tourism, were heavily skewed towards demand generated by Greek consumers (Exhibit 4).
Simply put, the Greek growth engine was fuelled by few domestic investments and high domestic
demand, artificially inflated by ample credit and an overleveraged public sector.
Government spending had to increase by ~6.5 pp of GDP between 2000 and 2009 to keep up with
accruing expenses, mainly mandated increases in public employees salaries and pensions (Exhibit
5). Over the same period, government income declined by ~5 pp of GDP, because the bulk of new
revenue was due from sales taxes (e.g., VAT), which were vulnerable to evasion and difficult to audit.
As a result, the Greek state had to borrow money on the international markets and later from official
emergency facilities, creating one of the most indebted public sectors globally.
This flawed model and the unexploited opportunity to restructure the Greek economy are also evident in the breakdown of Greek GDP. Tradable sectors contribute 3-4 pp of GDP less than they do
in other European countries (6-7 pp of GDP excluding direct shipping contribution). In core tradable
sectors, such as manufacturing and business services, the gap is even wider. Meanwhile, specific nontradable sectors are far larger, with retail and wholesale, for example, accounting for 18% of Greek
GDP, compared to 11% in south and central Europe (Exhibit 6).
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Greeces unsustainable growth model
13
Exhibit 3
ESTIMATES
FDI inward
365
4%
18,611
5,534
8,805
9%
17%
18%
Includes Mergers
& Acquisitions
Private
(excluding
FDI)
80%
Public
15%
79%
72%
65%
11%
11%
3
25%
70%
12%
11%
4,273
1 EU-15 excluding Luxembourg (due to its special economy structure); 2 Southern Europe: Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain; 3 Continental Europe: Austria,
Germany, Belgium, France, Netherlands; 4 Northern Europe: Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Sweden, UK
SOURCE: Eurostat; UNCTAD for FDI figures; Banque Nationale de Belgique for Belgium FDI 2000-01
Exhibit 4
36
17
61
60%
55%
34%
Domestic
demand
70%
66%
65%
66%
Foreign
demand
30%
34%
35%
40%
45%
Greece
Spain
Italy
France
Turkey
Portugal
14
Exhibit 5
Labor/social protection
Social benefits
Health
2.5
2.1
Education
6.1
Compensation of employees
1.7
Intermediate consumption
1.2
Subsidies
0.3
Capital investments
0.4
0.3
0.7
Total
0.7
0.4
Defense
0.7
Other
Economic affairs
3.0
Interest
6.5
1.6
2.1
Total
6.5
Note: includes government expenditure on final goods and services plus interests, social benefits, capital transfers
SOURCE: Eurostat, ELSTAT; IMF 3rd Review March 2011
Exhibit 6
ESTIMATES
211 bn
Tradable
sectors
Manufacturing
Tourism
Business Services
15%
16%
16%
6%
8%
14%
9%
7%
18%
11%
11%
Real Estate
10%
12%
12%
Public Administration
9%
7%
7%
Other non-tradable2
28%
32%
31%
Greece
Southern
Europe
Other tradable1
Nontradable
sectors
9%
7%
3%
2,764 bn 5,078 bn
2%
Central
Europe
1 Agriculture, shipping, energy, other ; 2 Health, education, post & telecom, utilities, financial services, construction, land transport; 3 Excluding
Luxembourg
SOURCE: Eurostat; WIS Global Insight
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Greeces unsustainable growth model
15
16
Exhibit 7
Index 100= Greece
Greeces GDP per capita gap driven by productivity and labor
participation deficits
1 unemployment rate
2009
Percent
91 92
Productivity
2009 USD PPP/Hour worked
92
91
91
88
66
70
67
65
38
37
35
31
Employees/population
97
30
Participation rate
97
Percent
74
77
74
73
4
Labor utilization
Hours per capita
90
88
76
80
100
81
68
82
78
69
1.7
1.6
1.5
100
1.6 2.1
75
67
66
66
83
1.8
SOURCE: IMF; Global Insights; Eurostat; The Conference Board Total Economy Database
Exhibit 8
58
2.0
55
1.1
1.1
49
-40%
1.6
48
-29%
42
0.7
-17%
2.4
35
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Greeces unsustainable growth model
17
Exhibit 9
Low productivity accounting for (more than) the entire wealth gap
ESTIMATES
Contribution to per capita GDP gap vs. United States by key drivers
2009 PPP, $ thousand
Northern
Europe
Greece
Total per capita
GDP (wealth) gap
15.0
Productivity
Hours per
employee
19.0
7.3
Share of working
age population
Unemployment
rate
Statistical
discrepancies
4.1
9.2
16.0
7.5
2.2
12.1
7.4
0.8
1.2
1.6
0.3
0.1
0.2
1.5
1.9
0.8
0.7
0
-1.5
Southern Europe
8.5
2.4
0.6
Participation rate
Continental
Europe
1.2
-0.5
-0.4
SOURCE: The Conference Board; IMF; Eurostat; Global Insight; OECD; McKinsey Global Institute
Exhibit 10
ESTIMATES
Low sector productivity
contribution effect
Productivity level
Labor productivity gap versus US1
PPP 2005 USD/worked hour
11
-5
2
5
7
5
22
1
14
-18
1
24
13
-2
9
1 Excluding mining, real estate, education, health and other public goods
SOURCE: EU KLEMS; McKinsey Global Institute
18
Exhibit 11
Employed
Unemployed
Non-participating
100% =
100% =
Greece
20% 10%
70%
1,101
54%
Italy
20% 8%
72%
6,071
51%
Portugal
29%
Spain
27%
Austria
Denmark
Germany
Netherlands
63%
8%
20%
54%
53%
63%
41%
5%
58%
47%
1,163
33%
9%
5%
48%
6%
31%
4,367
989
68%
57%
70%
37%
9%
44%
5%
24%
9%
13%
30%
3% 27%
3,060
16,862
3,022
13,142
2,320
692
74%
4% 22%
9,136
70%
5% 25%
22,163
2,006
71%
3% 27%
4,496
SOURCE: OECD
1,456
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Greeces unsustainable growth model
19
Exhibit 12
Investment and
scale discouraged
Large, inefficient
public sector
D
E
Cumbersome legal
and judicial system
Widespread
informality
15. Heavy administrative burden in courts resulting to long trial lead times
17. Substantial wealth creation and transaction outside formal economy
McKinsey & Company
Exhibit 13
Average productivity by
business size in
manufacturing
GVA/person employed, EU-27
average, indexed (250+=100)
25
Germany
15
Denmark
18
28
47
Austria
18
27
48
Netherlands
11
Spain
14
Italy
15
Portugal
Greece
29
26
20
28
25
34
0-9
34
25
32
30
31
26
19
30
17
26
27
0-9
10-49
49-250
250+
EXAMPLE: MANUFACTURING
10-49
49-250
250+
39
56
67
100
20
Exhibit 14
1.9
1.6
1.6
1.6
1.5
1.5
1.5
1.4
1.4
1.4
1.3
1.3
1.3
1.3
1.2
1.2
1.2
1.2
1.1
1.1
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
0.9
0.8
0.8
2.4
2.4
2.3
1.4
SOURCE: OECD; IFC; ILO; World Bank; McKinsey Global Institute
70,000
United States
65,000
60,000
55,000
50,000
45,000
40,000
35,000
Belgium
France
Luxembourg
Norway Finland
Iceland
Australia
Sweden
Canada
Italy
Austria
UK
Switzerland
Japan
Germany
Denmark
Korea
Spain
New Zealand
Netherlands
30,000
Slovak Republic
Portugal
25,000
Greece
Hungary
Czech Republic
20,000
Mexico
Turkey
Poland
15,000
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
1.6
1.8
2.0
2.2
2.4
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Greeces unsustainable growth model
21
Exhibit 15
Public servants
compensation5
CAGR
per capita
2000-2008
2008 $ PPP 000s Percent
21.0
10.2
4.3
6.0
13.6
6.8
2.8
1.0
7.4
3.4
3.8
3.3
4.6
3.8
8.6
15.8
4
14.4
6.3
22.3
9.5
1 Northern Europe: Denmark, Finland, Ireland, UK, 2 Continental Europe: Austria, Germany, Netherlands, Luxembourg, 3 EU 15 (excluding Belgium,
France, Sweden due to data unavailability), 4 Southern Europe: Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain, 5 As reported in State Budget
Note: Public sector employees include both core and broader public sector entities
SOURCE: LABORSTA Labour Statistics Database; Eurostat, IMF
Exhibit 16
High-spenders with
low effectiveness
Denmark
55
50
Italy
Netherlands
Portugal
Ireland
Norway
Spain
40
70
Sweden
Austria
Greece
45
Lower
spend
Finland
France
60
50
40
Germany
Low-spenders with
high effectiveness
30
20
10
Note: Excluding interest; including government expenditure on final goods and services, social benefits and capital transfers
SOURCE: OECD; WEF Global Competitiveness Report 2010-2011
22
Exhibit 17
30
DK
ES
10
29
FI
26
UK
10
8
23
FR
11
22
PL
11
21
DE
HU
20
PT
19
19
CZ
19
BE
18
IT
16
SE
GR
29
14
10
9
12
9
11
12
11
14
1 Labor turnover = (Hirings+Separations)/total employment; annual averages across 2002-07, 2002-04 for Sweden
2 Last year for which Greece reported this figure
SOURCE: Employment in Europe 2009; DG EMPL calculations using EU LFS data; OECD
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Greeces unsustainable growth model
23
Exhibit 18
Slovak Republic
18
17
Poland
16
15
14
Spain
13
12
Greece
11
Italy
Finland
10
9
Germany
Belgium
New Zealand
OECD
Hungary
Canada
Australia
UK
Turkey
Sweden
Japan
United States
Ireland
Korea
Denmark
Norway
Portugal
Netherlands
Austria
Mexico
Iceland Switzerland
Luxembourg
Czech Republic
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
France
0
0
10
15
20
25
30
35
Exhibit 19
Iceland
80
Sweden
Norway
Denmark
United States
New Zealand
Finland
Canada
Luxembourg
Czech Republic Portugal
UK
France
Germany
Slovak Republic
Austria
Japan
Poland
75
70
65
60
55
Hungary
50
Greece
45
Ireland
Korea
Spain
Switzerland
Australia
Netherlands
Belgium
Italy
Mexico
40
35
Turkey
0
0
10
15
20
25
30
35
24
Exhibit 20
EU-15
Other OECD2
Japan
1.1
Switzerland
1.0
Sweden
0.9
0.8
Germany
0.7
Netherlands
0.6
0.5
Korea
0.4
Luxembourg
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
France
Slovak
Republic
Greece
3.0
3.2
Austria
Italy
Turkey
3.4
Spain
Mexico
3.6
Portugal
3.8
4.0
4.4
4.6
United States
Belgium
Norway
Poland
Finland
Denmark
4.8
Ireland
Australia
Iceland
5.0
5.2
United Kingdom
Canada
5.4
5.6
5.8
6.0
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Greeces unsustainable growth model
25
The traditional inability to effectively collect taxes is to a large extent driven by the lack of sophisticated
processes and practices in registration, evasion detection, case segmentation, evader contact
strategy and collection approaches.
There is also a substantial gap versus proven international practices across the tax value chain. Most
notable are deficiencies in the automated detection of potential tax offense perpetrators (based
on advanced statistical tools), the degree to which effective segmentation is used to drive different
contact/audit approaches, the ability to efficiently and effectively audit large amounts of cases and
the tactical orchestration and escalation of intervention methods to maximize collection of tax revenue
(Exhibit 21).
Beyond outright tax evasion, there is also a substantial informal labor market (especially among
the self-employed and very small businesses) where income taxes and social contributions are not
collected, and a large number of other untaxed areas such as fuel informality and unreported gaming.
Our outside-in analysis suggests that, in 2010, the total system revenue loss (state, companies,
consumers) from fuel informality was between 600-650 million. Moreover, undeclared gaming seems
to lead to an estimated 2 billion of non-registered revenues.
Exhibit 21
INDICATIVE
Current status
(e.g., likelihood/ability to pay) to segment taxpayers and prioritize segments and cases
Contact/
Collections
Taxpayer
service
Contact strategies definition of the most suitable contact and audit strategy based on
26
3.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
The new National Growth Model
27
28
These new standards will de facto translate to a number of major performance improvements in
key economic metrics: economic wealth (GDP per capita) would grow by more than 32%; aggregate
productivity would increase by more than 17%; dependence on private and public consumption would
drop from 94% to 75-80% of GDP; investments would reach or even exceed south European levels of
20-23%; and net exports would turn from negative 8-9% to zero or even positive 2% of GDP. In addition,
the National Growth Model could reach a set of important economic health milestones, such
as closing the tax gap (from 30% to 15-20%) and increasing employee turnover (from 14% to 20-25%)
(Exhibit 22).
The recession and the ongoing efforts for fiscal stabilization have already set in motion some of the
necessary macro developments. Private consumption is already declining (though not yet as a share of
GDP), as a result of lower disposable incomes and deleveraging by consumers. Eventually, total private
and public consumption would need to decline from its current level by 15-20 p.p. of GDP, to reach
sustainable levels observed in the rest of Europe.
More importantly, Greece needs to materially increase the amount of investment flowing into the country
to levels that converge to or exceed EU levels. The privatization program can help accomplish this by
attracting international investors for acquisition of key assets, fostering strategic partnerships with Greek
enterprises and encouraging sustained investment activity. Given that valuations of Greek assets are
currently depressed as a result of the crisis, each transaction should be viewed against mid- to longterm benefits including the elimination of incurred losses and subsidy outflows from the public purse,
as well as the important benefit of bringing in long term local and foreign investors and opening up
state-controlled business to competition, that will also eventually create investment and employment
opportunities while stimulating competitiveness.
Exhibit 22
31
41
35
41-43
93%
75-80%
-9%
0-2%
16%
20-23%
Tax gap2
30%
15-20%
Employment turnover3
14%
20-25%
Performance
Productivity
Health
To (2021)
1 In 2009 terms
2 Amount of tax liability that is not paid on time
3 Hirings plus separations over total employment
ESTIMATES
References
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
The new National Growth Model
29
The growth impact of the new National Growth Model and strategy could be significant. The
bottom-up analysis of the five largest production sectors and the eight rising stars suggests
that there is potential for raising annual GVA levels by 49 billion (55 billion in GDP terms) and
employment by an estimated 520,000 new jobs in a 10 year horizon through measures taken in these
sectors alone (including direct and indirect GVA effects, netting out overlaps among sectors) coupled
with the implementation of important horizontal, cross-sector growth measures and reforms.
The largest increase is likely to originate from the tourism sector, which could add 18 billion in GVA
per year, followed by the energy sector, which could add another 9 billion, food manufacturing
and agriculture, contributing 6 and 5 billion respectively. Retail is estimated to add 4 billion
(following a relative decline in the short-to-medium term as a result of the crisis and consumer credit
contraction), and rising stars such as aquaculture, medical tourism and generic pharmaceuticals
may generate as much as 7 billion in additional annual output (Exhibit 23).
Assuming an underlying 10 year annual growth trajectory of 1.5%, this would mean that Greeces
growth rate could double to 3% per year on average over the next decade. This positive impact
reflects only the cumulative effect of actions taken in the sectors examined by Greece 10 Years
Ahead, with other sectors assumed growing at the baseline rate of 1.5%. Even if that baseline assumption were to be proven optimistic (e.g., due to externalities negatively affecting global
demand) the estimated impact in GVA and employment would only take longer to materialize rather
than being jeopardized in absolute terms. This would also mean a collective boost to productivity
an important pillar of the new National Growth Model by more than 17% (Exhibit 24).
The new National Growth Model could also have a significant impact on the countrys fiscal and
trade balances. From these sectors alone, Greece could have a positive impact on the fiscal balance
in excess of 8 billion and on the trade balance in excess of 16 billion in a 10 year horizon, going a long
way towards curbing the large deficits currently crippling the economy (Exhibit 25).
Particularly important under the current economic circumstances is the fact that more than 30-35%
of this impact could materialize within a five year horizon, assuming effective implementation of the
reform measures.
The described potential requires an average annual investment increase in excess of 16 billion
versus 2010 levels. More specifically, the identified demand upside generated by the sectors
examined in Greece 10 Years Ahead would warrant more than 10 billion in new investments, with
the remaining 6 billion generated by the other sectors. Construction and manufacturing would
deliver the bulk of this increase, the former accounting approximately for 9 billion and the latter for
4 billion, with all other sectors accounting for the remaining 3 billion (Exhibit 26). This increase
would lead to a total annual investment of almost 50 billion on average per year for the next ten
years. These levels although representing a significant increase (+47%) versus the 34 billion
investments of 2010 are considered attainable, based on Greeces past investment record before
and after the Athens 2004 Olympic Games (e.g., total investment - in 2010 prices - of 54 billion in
2003 and 63 billion in 2007).
Given the current distressed fiscal situation, as well as the challenging outlook for public investments
going forward, recovery of domestic and foreign private investment is critical. As argued by this
report, the public investment program should be revisited and should focus on growth-related
infrastructure projects with a high contribution to domestic GVA, leveraging EU funds and PPP
schemes. The positive impact from such a reorientation of the public investment program would
complement the investment upside calculated by the horizontal cross-sector and sector-specific
initiatives proposed by Greece 10 Years Ahead.
30
Exhibit 23
Employment
Thousand jobs
132
9
Rising stars
Agriculture
Food
manufacturing
83
2
20
22
8
13
15
13
22
470
18
80
45
27
34
2010
2016
Tourism
2.280
30
810
19
10
13
Energy
+491
(+59%)
24
104
5
Retail
ESTIMATES
2021
240
2.430
60
2.800
100
780
+520
(+23%)
720
520
280
80
610
360
80
650
770
870
2010
2016
2021
Note: Tourism and Retail are depicted in 2009 figures instead of 2010
1 ~55 billion in GDP terms
Exhibit 24
ESTIMATES
Greece 10 Years Ahead
focus sectors
Rest of economy1
10 year CAGR
271
Employment
Million jobs
14%
~3%
5.0
4.4
203
139
~1.5%
2.1
~5%
2.3
83
2010
2021E
2010
542
1.6%
462
2.2
0.5%
120
132
17%
1.3%
2.8
2021E
2.0%
63
57
36
2010
47
1.0%
2.7%
2021E
1 Assuming baseline growth for the Greek economy at an average annual rate of 1.5%
2 Weighted average
McKinsey & Company
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
The new National Growth Model
31
Exhibit 25
ESTIMATES
16.5
Rising stars
8.3
3.3
2.5
Retail
2.7
Agriculture
1.3
1.2
0.7
Food
manufacturing
0.8
0.5
Energy
0.2
8.6
3.0
Tourism
2021
2021
1 Effect on fiscal balance includes corporate tax, personal tax, and VAT revenues (with exception of Retail where personal tax revenues were not
included); not taking into account social security contributions effect on state-controlled pension and health insurance funds, import/export duties, or
other similar revenues
McKinsey & Company
Exhibit 26
ESTIMATES
16.3
3.1
Other manufacturing
and other sectors
5.9
Rising Stars
Retail
Agriculture
Food manufacturing
1.5
0.8
1.1
1.3
Energy
1.9
Tourism
3.8
By sector
generating
demand1
Other
4.1
Manufacturing
9.1
Construction/infrastructure
Adding 16
billion to the 34
billion
investment
levels of 2010
would imply
annual
investment of
~50 billion, a
figure similar to
the 2000-2008
average
By sector
delivering
investment
32
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
The new National Growth Model
Exhibit 27
33
Enhancing
the execution
capacity and
limiting the
size of the
public sector
4
Enforce IPSAS / IFRS1 double-entry standards across
all state entities; establish a budgeting and financial
consolidation system to plan, monitor and manage
performance centrally
2
Establish a public sector Talent Placement Office
(TPO) to hire and deploy local and international talent
(~200 FTE) into pivotal senior managerial and technical
positions
Enforcing
compliance and
limiting
informality
Priority 1
Priority 2
Priority 3
Priority 3
1
Introduce the Economic Development & Reform Unit
(EDRU) as an independent institution under the Prime
Minister to support the government in planning,
coordinating and monitoring the execution of the reforms
Exhibit 28
Priority 2
Igniting and
sustaining
growth
Priority 1
34
Exhibit 29
Advisory
committee
CEO
Director of
Planning
Local and
international
sector and
function experts
providing input
and knowledge
at operational
level
Conduct sector
planning, including
targets for key metrics
and support
respective Ministers
and CEOs in planning
Liaise with respective
project manager on
delivery side
Project Managers
Heads of
sector clusters
External experts
network
Director of Delivery
Monitoring
Analyst team
Shared resources
between Planning and
Delivery Monitoring
units
Conduct required
analyses at sectoral
and cross-sectoral level
Ministry contacts
Permanently placed
within key Ministries
Reporting consolidation
team
Oversee projects/
initiatives
Monitor and report
progress,
effectiveness, and
outcomes
Serve as single
interface point with
each Ministry
Coordinate with
relevant project
managers
Gather and process
project data
Develop monitoring
reports
McKinsey & Company
Exhibit 30
2 Establish the Talent Placement Office to hire and deploy ~200 executives
into pivotal technical and managerial positions in the public sector
Pool of local and
international talent
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
The new National Growth Model
35
Exhibit 31
Description
Key
benefits
Lending
Effective reorientation of
unabsorbed NSRF funds in
mission-critical uses for
reigniting growth
Equivalent to a NPV-positive
investment in the Greek economy
with a short payback period
Repayment
Exhibit 32
NOT EXHAUSTIVE
million
Delayed Project
NSRF budget
1,050
Delayed Project
NSRF budget
130
730
125
511
120
456
78
429
78
425
Motorway Veroia-Naousa-Skydra
63
61
363
Energopolis Kozanis
Salamina-Perama connection
350
National Registry
45
Moreas (Korinthos-Tripoli-kalamata)
250
41
200
Kos airport
30
184
23
154
N/A
150
N/A
150
N/A
N/A
36
Exhibit 33
EXAMPLES
Cross-sectoral
investments
(Public or PPP1)
Energy (Public,
PPP or Private)
1 Public-Private Partnership
McKinsey & Company
Stimulating sector growth by grouping sectors and launching dedicated programs to remove
administrative, regulatory and infrastructure barriers within each sector across seven core
areas and processes namely business licensing and operation, taxation, labor regulation and
operations, uses of land, application of justice, public health regulation, and funding procedures.
Moreover, in the context of this effort, the Greek state could provide growth-linked, output-based
(e.g., investment, exports) incentives (e.g., tax rebates) (Exhibits 34-35).
Simplifying and accelerating investment approval and licensing and improving the FastTrack framework, leveraging proven techniques and practices from the Athens 2004
experience. This would require intervention on three fronts: (i) introducing a dedicated legal
pre-clearance team; (ii) replacing the 'deadline induced approval' principle with a legislative
amendment of the underlying simplified processes; and (iii) upgrading Invest in Greece in terms
of managerial talent and organization (Exhibit 36).
Revising the environmental and zoning framework, adjusting specifications for land usage and
adapting development standards to real market context and growth imperatives, while preserving
Greeces environmental legacy. This area merits dedicated attention beyond the relevant
interventions that could result from the administrative and regulatory barrier removal program
(reform #9) mentioned above.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
The new National Growth Model
37
Exhibit 34
Cluster 1
Cluster 2
Cluster 3
Cluster 4
Cluster 5
Tradable products
Services
Trade
Public Goods
(e.g.,
manufacturing,
agriculture,
aquaculture)
(e.g., tourism,
shipping, financial
services,
construction)
Nat. resources
& Infrastructure
(e.g., retail,
wholesale)
(e.g., education,
health)
Each project to
address and
remove burdens
across 7 core
horizontal
dimensions (at a
minimum - other
areas can be
added if found
relevant during
each program)
(e.g., energy,
water, ICT,
logistics, waste)
Exhibit 35
Food
processing
Agriculture
& Aquaculture
Retail
Energy
NOT EXHAUSTIVE
38
Exhibit 36
Board of Directors
Advisory Committee
CEO
Support department
Investment Analysis
Valuation
Receive investment
requests and manage
fast-track workflow
Analyze & assess
business cases
Check cases for
omissions
Deal structuring
Establish presence in
main regions of
economic interest
(e.g., N. America,
Middle East, Europe,
Far East)
Project Managers
Strategic Marketing
Administrative support/
process management
Legal clearance
Finally, in terms of the employment framework, judicial operations and countering informality, the
higher priority reforms involve the following:
Completing pending flexibility and efficiency-related labor reforms e.g., implementing
the unified compensation scheme across the public sector and the cap in employment
discontinuation reimbursement for fixed-term contracts, broadening part-time employment and
shifting from tenure- to tenure-and-performance-based advancement in the public sector.
Accelerating decision making in the Council of State (CoS) and earlier degree courts. This would
involve introducing a 7th CoS department for strategic investments and economic reforms and
installing a systematic case prioritization approach. Moreover, it involves selectively increasing
the number of judges at first and second degree level of administrative courts and some
additional highly qualified support staff capacity at the CoS to address the current backlogs.
Introducing internationally proven methodologies in tax evasion detection and collection to
boost state revenues, while selectively easing tax pressure and providing incentives in areas
affecting growth, such as investment incentives and VAT for specific growth-sensitive categories
(Exhibit 37).
In further addressing informality beyond tax evasion, the Greek state could consider
consolidating all internal auditing functions of all Ministries and core public sector entities
into one Central State Auditing Unit, reinforcing a Central Procurement Unit and launching
dedicated projects (SWAT teams) to address fraud in different fields of economic activity, such
as illegal imports, undeclared labor, and unreported gaming.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
The new National Growth Model
39
Exhibit 37
2
Determine value at stake
Higher
Determine probability of
collection/rehabilitation
Likely
amount
of tax
evasion
VS3
De-prioritise
Higher
Lower
Lower
Higher
Lower
Ability to pay
Lower
Probability of tax
evasion/fraud
Value
at
stake
PC2
Cross functional
teams
Intense collections
efforts (e.g., fast
track to legal)
PC3
Lower
Lower
PC1
Willingness to
pay
VS2
Higher
Higher
VS1
SIMPLIFIED
Primarily centralized
collections
Moderate intensity
direct collection and
potential escalation
to regional
collectors
Centralized
collections
Limited direct
collector
involvement (seek
to automate)
Higher
Probability of collection/
rehabilitation
40
4.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
41
42
Exhibit 38
Production
125 billion
Input cost
45 billion
Public admin
Education
Health
Imputed
returns
20 billion
Real estate
Derived
demand
16 billion
Financial services
Construction
38
17
14
9
9
8
7
6
6
5
6
19%
8%
7%
4%
4%
4%
3%
3%
3%
2%
3%
18
15
12
9%
7%
6%
20
10%
9
7
5%
3%
ESTIMATES
Direct employment
Thousands, 2010
Share
18%
11%
8%
1%
13%
1%
7%
1%
2%
3%
4%
783
492
356
49
551
53
292
48
93
147
185
8%
7%
6%
370
310
228
6
~0%
3%
7%
116
319
1 GVA=GDP-Taxes + subsidies; 2 Excluding fuel retail; 3 Excluding pharma manufacturing and ship building; 4 Extraction, processing and retail
distribution of fuels; electricity; Note 1: Figures include only direct GVA and employment and are therefore not comparable with figures that include
indirect effects
McKinsey & Company
SOURCE: WIS Global Insight; EU KLEMS 2009; Eurostat
Exhibit 39
Market
profile and
success
conditions
Availability of indigenous
resource inputs and/or raw
materials
Specific know-how
availability
Existing infrastructure that
could be leveraged and
scaled-up
Geographical proximity to
destination markets
Market size and growth
Nature and scope of
competition e.g.,
Labor vs. knowledge vs.
capital intensive
Local vs. regional vs.
global reach
Success parameters in each
value chain step
Note: The scope of G10YA involved 13 sectors/sub-sectors (the 5 largest production sectors and 8 rising stars) of the economy,
clearly recognizing that there might be additional growth opportunities in other sector/sub-sectors not been covered by G10YA
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
43
44
Facilitating access and transportation. Greece needs to actively promote better connectivity
with emerging and long-haul markets by attracting more direct flights from these source markets,
as well as lowering entry barriers (facilitating Schengen Visa processes) and airport charges.
Revamping Greeces Tourism capabilities and know-how. Greece needs a distinctive
Tourism University degree (undergraduate and graduate) with strong international links, as well
as revisiting and upgrading the existing academic curricula to cover the necessary technical
capabilities. Moreover, it is critical to set up eight functions (i.e., tourism strategic planning, source
market and product management, marketing execution, channel/sales support, accreditation,
sector intelligence, fast-track for large tourism investments, tourism operation facilitation / local
tourism KEPs). Leveraging and revamping existing capabilities (e.g., within the Ministry and the
Greek National Tourism Organization GNTO), while injecting additional talent and setting up a
Public-Private Partnership (PPP) to develop some of these functions (Exhibit 44) will be important
to achieve this capability upgrade.
Based on our estimates, the impact of Greeces new tourism strategy could be more than 10
billion incremental annual tourism demand in a 5-year horizon and more than 25 billion in a
10 year horizon. We expect the growth of visitors demand to come primarily from foreign visitors
(approximately 62%) driven by a parallel increase in both number of visitors (+48% in ten years) and
average daily spend (+32%) (Exhibit 45).
This incremental tourism demand would result to a 18 billion increase annual GVA (in a ten year
horizon) and an increase in employment by approximately 220,000 jobs. The positive impact on
Greeces trade and fiscal balance could reach approximately 9 billion and 3 billion respectively.
Exhibit 40
Millions of departures
percentage points
market share, 2004-09
~81
UK
~59
0.1
-1.4
12
0.8
USA
0.6
14
3.4
SOURCE: Euromonitor
1.2
Russia
China
~33
0.7
0.2
0.9
3.1
0.4
~60
0.3
1.8
16
28
N/A
~22
11
France
-0.2
-0.2
~23
5
13
Italy
~32
20
10
Scandinavia
~35
~0
~0
1.2
~0
0.9
0.9
6.6
5.2
~0
~0
McKinsey & Company
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
45
Exhibit 41
High priority
Defend and reinforce share (>3.5-4%) in mature markets: Priority 1 - UK, Germany, Scandinavia,
Priority 2 - France, Italy, Netherlands
Aggressively penetrate and gain share in North America (>1%), Russia (>1%), and China (>0.5%)
2 Upgrade and selectively expand the product portfolio while improving the mass-affluent mix
Upgrade Sun & Beach to increase value for money and establish a healthier mass/affluent mix (~55/45)
Develop City Break themes in Athens/Thessaloniki with global events, MICE1, culture and leisure offers
Aggressively build Cruises and Sailing/Yachting themes for European leadership (25% embarkation and
visits share compared to 10% and 21% share today)
Develop a systematically planned network of LIRs2 and vacation homes (15-20 LIRs, ~50K homes)
4 Introduce multi-channel platforms for a distinctive pre-visit experience (e.g., Visit Greece portal)
5 Revamp Tourism zoning and planning legislation and lift excessive restrictions
Developing quality
infrastructure while
accelerating
investments
Facilitate the development of quality accommodation, including LIRs, vacation homes and golf courses
Enable the productive utilization of existing dormant tourism assets
6 Pursue growth-relevant public infrastructure investments: upgrading 3-4 ports (for cruise embarkations),
building 30-35 new marinas (to reach 60-65); investigate regional airport expansions
7 Upgrade cultural sites infrastructure (prioritized by cultural importance and traffic) while developing 2-3
new major conference facilities to reinforce City Break and MICE value proposition
8 Leverage the fast-track framework (including the introduction of leaner licensing processes and the
introduction of a legal pre-clearance team) to accelerate tourism investments
9 Increase flight connectivity with US, Russia and China; facilitate Schengen procedures
Facilitating access
and transportation
Re-plan and re-schedule capacity, connectivity and quality/cost offering for island transportation; consider
10
the development of 2-3 local hubs (e.g., in Cyclades, Dodecanese, Ionian islands)
Review pricing at access points (ports and airports) against demand elasticity
11
Build Greeces University Department for Tourism Studies (undergraduate and graduate); upgrade
12
Developing
capabilities and
know how
existing curriculum for technical education; introduce extensive international exchange programs
Step-improve central sector planning and management capabilities; establish eight critical functions
13
(e.g., strategic planning, product/customer management, marketing execution, channel/sales support); inject
talent into the Ministry and GNTO; create a market driven PPP3 for selected critical functions
Exhibit 42
Departures growth
% CAGR 2005-2010
Priority 2
13
12
India
20
18
China
Singapore
14
2
1
-1
-2
6
2
0
-2
-4
France
-5
City Break
Golf
United Kingdom
0.7
-4
MICE1
Wellness
1.7
-3
Cruises
10
0.9
Mexico
1.3 United States Germany
Netherlands
Ukraine
Scandinavia
2.2
Medical
12
Russia
Austria
Switzerland
Spain
Belgium Italy
Sailing/Yachting
16
Australasia
Turkey
Canada
Touring
-6
-8
-6
0
10
11
Percent of departures
2010
10
20
30 70
80
90
100
110
Market size
billion
McKinsey & Company
46
Exhibit 43
Cruise passenger
visits
Millions of passengers
Cruise passenger
embarkations
Millions of passengers
23.8
ESTIMATES
Cruise industry
direct expenditures1
billions
Cruise industry
employment2
Thousands of jobs
9.4
296.3
52%
56%
12%
8%
30%
32%
6%
4%
4.9
34%
41%
Rest of
Europe
21%
17%
Spain
21%
35%
Italy
21%
10%
Greece
1 Excluding shipbuilding
2 Including shipbuilding
SOURCE: G. P. Wild
PPP1 ()
GNTO
Marketing execution
Accreditation
Sector Intelligence
Execute marketing
Provide sales
support through
portal and/or call
center
Develop operate
and maintain
visitgreece.gr
Collect, refine and
disseminate local
and international
best practices to
local players
process for
accreditation
Monitor,
performance
manage the
execution of
accreditation (to be
performed outside
the GNTO)
Audit the
accreditation
process and
outcomes
sector development
and trends (e.g.,
Quarterly
Barometer,
Annual Tourism
Report)
Review and report
employment and
education
developments
Link with
International
Tourism
Organizations
Exhibit 44
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
47
Exhibit 45
19.3
Visitors demand
30.4
37.7
5.2
32.5
49.9
12.8
37.1
Foreign
demand1
11.1
Total demand
40.4
51.2
7.6
43.6
66.0
16.4
49.6
2009
2016
2021
21.5
1.6
19.9
16.2
3.6
12.6
5.7
10.0
13.5
2.4
11.1
16.1
3.6
12.5
2009
2016
2021
26.6
3.9
22.7
23.3
8.9
14.4
8.0
1.8
6.2
8.8
1.8
7.0
Government
expenditure
3.3
3.3
2009
Number of
Visitors (mil)
13.3
16.3
1.9
14.4
Average stay
(days)
5.4
5.4
0.2
5.4
5.2
19.7
3.1
16.6
5.4
0.4
5.0
Average spend/day
(/day)
Capital
investment
Other
demand
ESTIMATES
Incremental impact
3.7
0.4
3.3
2016
146
146
165
14
151
192
41
151
Other exports
(to non-visitors)
4.9
1.2
3.7
1.0
1.0
1.8
0.2
1.6
2.4
0.6
1.8
2021
2009
2016
2021
1 Foreign demand includes cruises spend on top of regular international visitors spend (Baseline: 0.6 billion for 2009,
1.3 billion for 2016, 1.9 billion for 2021/Incremental impact: 0.4 billion for 2016 and 1 billion for 2021)
4.1.2. Energy
Energy accounts directly for 4% of Greeces GVA and plays a key role in the competitiveness of
domestic industrial players. The sector in Greece has a higher contribution to the GVA of the economy
compared to other countries, for example in south Europe and Germany. The GVA of the Greek
energy sector was growing between 2000 and 2008, contrary to other economies where the sectors
GVA was declining throughout most of the past decade. Both the higher contribution and the recent
growth are largely driven by sector inefficiencies.
Energy consumption in buildings and transportation is higher compared to other South European
countries such as Portugal, Spain and Italy (in the case of transportation; Exhibit 46). The current
energy mix is dependent on petroleum products (versus lower-cost gas) compared to other
economies and targets for the future mix include a high share of renewables that will likely increase
costs. These inefficiencies are partially offset by regulated low electricity tariffs and good energy
efficiency in the industrial sector, which keep the overall per capita cost of energy low compared to
European peers. Clearly acting on these efficiency challenges could further reduce the cost of energy
for Greece.
In addition, the sector is characterized by limited extroversion, as there is relatively little activity of
Greek energy players abroad, and narrow activity across the value chain, with practically no oil and
gas upstream activity despite the potential domestic reserves and relatively small participation in the
manufacturing of infrastructure for the sector. Both the limited extroversion and the narrow scope in the
sectors value chain currently limit the potential for growth of the sector.
48
Greece 10 Years Ahead outlines 14 possible priorities across four areas that sector players and the
Greek state should consider (Exhibit 47):
Improving energy efficiency. Involves initiatives to streamline energy consumption mainly in buildings (Exhibit 48) and transportation. A number of technical levers are available, several of which
require upfront investment and thoughtful incentive schemes to accelerate implementation. Pursuing
an effective energy efficiency program for buildings would require the adjustment and increased
specificity of relevant standards and could result to a beneficial spillover impact in the output of the
manufacturing and construction sectors (estimated annual GVA upside of ~1.5 billion).
Boosting productivity. We estimate that in electricity, efficiency and productivity improvements
could reduce unit costs by at least 10%-15%. In the petroleum sector, unit costs could be
improved by at least 5%-10%. Actions include availability, operating efficiency (fuel, labor and
3rd party costs) and capital productivity improvements, reducing power transmission and
distribution losses (e.g., by installing smart meters for short to medium term benefit; smart grid
investment case for Greece needs further investigation), and minimizing informality/illegal imports
in petroleum retail. Finally, the introduction of a price and cap system needs to be considered to
ensure fair returns and appropriate investment conditions across the electric power value chain.
Optimizing the energy mix by assessing fuel and technology substitution alternatives in terms
of security of supply, financial impact and environmental implications. A comprehensive energy
strategy for the country would be needed, in the context of which the plan towards the EC
202020 targets should be revisited to ensure that both environmental and economic sustainability
(in terms of CAPEX and OPEX implications) are properly balanced (Exhibit 49). Finally, it will
be important to review and develop an economically viable plan for the interconnection of the
islands.
Exhibit 46
ESTIMATES
Main observations/comments
Buildings
MWh/capita
6.8
4.1
5.6
8.3
11.7
Consumption
MWh/capita
29.8
23.3 19.6 25.5 26.3
Transport
GWh/car
15.8 14.2 17.8 12.7 14.8
Industry
MWh/ of industry GVA
2.3
2.6
2.4
1.6
1.0
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
Exhibit 47
49
A
Improving energy
efficiency
Boosting
productivity and
efficiency
C
Optimizing the
energy mix
Increasing
extroversion and
sector impact
High priority
Exhibit 48
2010-2021
Lever
110
100
90
80
102
88
95
86
Efficiency
potential
TWh
-19%
83
70
3.3
2.4
Lighting
Efficiency package commercial
50
Appliances
40
8.0
HVAC
60
OpEx
savings
billion
1.8
1.4
1.1
CapEx
billion
1.9
6.8
0.7
2.3
0.7
0.7
1.0
1.0
0.5
1.2
0.5
0.1
Water heating
0.5
0.2
0.4
20
Electronics
0.4
0.2
0.0
10
0.4
0.1
0.2
5.8
12.7
30
0
2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
2021
Total
19.3
50
Exhibit 49
Meets target
Does not
meet target
Legally binding
40%
22-34%
36%
36%
20%
15-16%
42%
25%
24%
18%
10%
10%
CapEX required in
period 2011 - 2020
bn
Indexed cost of power3
100%=Business as usual
18
~115%
~105%
1 Assuming equal share of ETS (Emission Trading Scheme) emission reduction between member countries
2 Renewable Energy Sources
3 Not reflecting possible CO2 charges
4 Limit the penetration of high cost renewable technologies, e.g., onshore wind beyond a certain capacity (low load factors and high grid costs), offshore wind
SOURCE: EU Directive 2009/28/EC, EU Decision 406/2009/EC, Law 3851/2010, Greek Greenhouse Gas Abatement cost
curve 2010
I ncreasing extroversion and participation in the sectors value chain. Priorities include
leveraging Greece's georgraphical position and participate to regional gas and electric power
infrastructure projects, promoting exports of energy products mainly in the next five years, and
accelerating the national hydrocarbons entity and the respective efforts for the exploration of domestic
oil and gas reserves.
The potential growth upside in a ten year horizon from the energy sector could be an additional (direct and
indirect) annual GVA of approximately 9 billion (versus 2010) and measures in the sector could lead to an
improvement in fiscal and trade balance by approximately 500 and 700 million respectively.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
51
Exhibit 50
513
Manufacturing
376
199
Tourism
179
Business services
29.7
21.9
11.6
10.4
108
6.3
Construction
105
6.1
88
Transport
5.1
Financial services
41
2.4
Health
37
2.2
Other
23
1.3
Education
23
1.3
Agriculture
20
1.2
Real Estate
0.3
Energy
0.2
Note: Tourism includes hotels & restaurants and entertainment; Post&telco includes media; Manufacturing includes mining; Public admin and utilities not
included
SOURCE: EL.STAT, latest relevant report, 2006
The manufacturing sector comprises four broad sub-sectors: (a) food processing, accounting for
approximately 25% of manufacturing GVA and 20% of employment, (b) heavy industry, accounting
for 23% of manufacturing GVA and 33% of employment, (c) beverages, accounting for 10% of manufacturing GVA; and (d) a set of smaller size sub-sectors with a diverse set of activities that represent
the remaining 41% of the manufacturing GVA (Exhibit 51).
Food processing is the largest sub-sector and continues to grow both in Greece and the EU driven
by the demand shift to packaged foods and the more regional competitive nature of the sector. It is
examined in detail as part of the Greece 10 Years Ahead study not only because of its size, but also
because it lends itself to the application of both the cross-sector recommendations, as well as to
specific recommendations at the 'micro' sector level. Heavy industry includes a smaller number of
typically mature players in fields such as metals, cement and mining, with established international
presence. Key actions for supporting the competitiveness of these players include the reforms and
measures identified at the cross-sector macroeconomic level, as well as measures relevant to the
reduction of energy costs covered in the analysis of the energy sector. Similarly, beverages primarily
include large multinational and some local players who could also benefit significantly from the crosssector reforms. The rest of the manufacturing sector ranges from publishing to communication
equipment and is highly diverse and fragmented. As such, recommendations on growth priorities
and measures for the individual sub-sectors beyond the cross-sector ones would only have
limited applicability and have not been explored.
In food processing, due to the availability of high quality raw materials and produce, specialized
know-how and reasonable cost levels (in some categories), Greece has significant potential to
increase its output, boost exports and contain imports, especially in four major categories, namely
oils & fats, fruits & vegetables, dairy, and bakery products.
52
Exhibit 51
GVA
billion, 2010
Food
processing
4.2
Heavy
industry1
4.0
Beverages
Other manufacturing
sub-sectors2
Total
Employment
Thousands of
Imports / Exports
employees, 2007 billion, 2010
-3.6
77.5
-10.1
128.6
1.7
7.1
-24.8
169.5
17.0
386.0
-38.9
Imports
Exports
Trade balance
billion, 2010
-1.9
1.7
-6.2
4.0
-0.2
-0.4 0.2
10.4
ESTIMATES
7.1
12.9
-17.6
-25.9
1 Fabricated metal products, mineral based products, manufacturing of basic metals, rubber and plastic products, machinery equipment, chemicals and
fertilizers
2 Printing and publishing, furniture, jewelry, specialty chemicals, drugs, wearing apparel, electrical machinery, paper and pulp, transport equipment,
textiles, tobacco products, motor vehicles, wood products, communication equipment, leather goods and medical equipment
SOURCE: Global Insights for real GVA and import/export figures; Eurostat for employment figures
Exploiting these opportunities would require Greece to address a number of issues related to the lack
of large scale modern and productive processing capacity, product innovation and international market access. As an example, Greece is the 3rd largest olive oil producer worldwide and exports 60%
of its output to Italy in bulk, yet in doing so allows Italy to capture an extra 50% premium on the price
of the final packaged product (Exhibit 52). The fact that Greece holds only a 28% share of the global
'Greek Feta' cheese market and 30% of the US 'Greek Style' yoghurt markets, further emphasizes a
clear commercial opportunity for Greece.
Greece 10 Years Ahead outlines 12 possible priorities and measures for market participants and the
Greek state to consider, grouped in four major strategic themes (Exhibits 53-54):
Prioritizing target export markets. This would first involve the clustering of foreign markets
based on common retailer presence and commercial synergies and a subsequent prioritization of
these markets based on their size, growth potential and receptiveness to Greek products (proxied
by Greek diaspora and tourist origination). Priority 1 markets include North America, UK, Germany
& Austria, and the Balkans. Priority 2 markets include Italy, France & Belgium, Scandinavia,
Australia, selected CEE countries and Russia (Exhibit 55).
S
tep-improving product value proposition and innovation. Initiatives include the acceleration
of the global introduction of the Made in Greece origin certification platform and product-specific
actions, such as packaging and branding olive oil and substituting imports of other oils (i.e.,
sunflower, palm) mainly for wholesale use, further driving product innovation and advertising
of place of origin for Greek flagship dairy products (e.g., strained yoghurt and feta cheese), and
selectively marketing high-potential, non-feta cheese categories, and boosting Greek Heritage
and Mediterranean diet based product innovation in the bakery category.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
53
Exhibit 52
Greece does not capture its fair share in olive oil exports and foregoes
significant opportunities, especially with regards to Italy
Greek, Spanish and Italian exports to core geographies
Top
exporting
geographies1
USA
12
France
Germany
Greek exports
relative share
Percent
Exports value
mil, 2009
464
452
249
246
16
150
Portugal
150
UK
136
Japan
Australia
150
140
107
109
75
Switzerland
28 47
49
47
49
Brazil
1 42
Belgium
2 36
38
China
4 32
36
43
Russia
2 30 33
Mexico
0 23 23
0
3
Italy
Other
Price:
2.1/kg
2
13
63
Netherlands
1
10
79
55
Canada
166
~50%
premium
5
4
In these 15 countries
Greeces relative share
is only 4% while Italy
and Spain hold 96%
Price:
3.1/kg2
5
12
7
0
54
Exhibit 53
High priority
Step-improving
product
strategy and
value
proposition
1 Cluster export markets based on common retailers presence and prioritize based on size and growth:
2 Convert exports of bulk olive oil to branded packaged and substitute imports of other oils
Aggressively campaign in core markets to build brand awareness and equity of Greek olive oil versus
Italian and Spanish; create the necessary processing/packaging capacity (see #7)
Substitute - to the extend possible - palm and sunflower oil imports with local olive oil and competitively
priced corn oil in the local HO.RE.CA and retail markets
3 Standardize the quality and increase the value added of Fruits & Vegetables category
Address high variability in quality; pursue quality standardization and upgrade programs
Increase the value added by tapping into the trend for healthy, high quality and more convenient products;
expand assortment to include more ready-to-cook and eat options; improve packaging to convey quality;
make use, re-use and storage easier
Continue growing and capture increasingly larger share of Greek feta and yoghurt by introducing greater
product innovation (e.g., in packaging, variations) and communicating the Greek origin
Create a compelling (high value) Greek PDO offer locally and internationally promoting other high quality
and popular cheeses (e.g., graviera, kaseri); include in broader campaigning (e.g., Greek Diet)
5 Deepen the geographic coverage and increase the innovation content of the bakery category
Adjust commercial strategy and allocation of production capacity to deeply penetrate priority markets
Introduce new product variations also emphasizing the Greek heritage and Mediterranean identity;
innovate in packaging to address needs for ease of use and convenience
6 Accelerate the global introduction of the Made in Greece origin certification mechanism
Exhibit 54
High priority
C
Increasing
processing
capacity and
scale
7 Investigate the development of 4-6 large scale modern processing and packaging units e.g.,
Two to three units for olive oil and olives (possibly in Peloponnese and Crete with 100-150 thousand tons of
olive oil processing capacity)
Two to three units for potatoes, tomatoes and selected fruits such as peaches, apples, oranges possibly in
Central Greece, North Greece, Peloponnese
8 Develop a dedicated proposition and increase production and processing scale in fragmented niche (PDO
or non PDO) Greek Specialty categories1 (e.g., honey, vinegar, mastiha, safran, ouzo, graviera)
9 Continue and reinforce the consolidation to form larger modern milk farms (to the extent possible); investigate the
viability for processing capacity for concentrated and powder milk to reduce imports
D
Securing
strong access
to priority
export markets
10
Establish the Greek Foods Company (GFC) (private or PPP with private sector control); tasks to include:
Define the network of primary units per category and pool their production output
Determine suitable market coverage model per country (and category)
Establish and manage wholesale and retailer networks per country/region
Plan and coordinate trade marketing and promotion initiatives
Manage the domestic logistics chain (including distribution and storage) and execute exports
11
Differentiate commercial strategy and country coverage model (for processed and non-processed categories)
Priority 1 markets (see #1): Strong local Key Account Manager (KAM) support to build up presence in large
grocery retailers and expand the wholesaler network; creation of small retail network (e.g., Greek Corners) in
high traffic areas of major cities to drive awareness and trial
Priority 2 markets (see #1): Local Key Account Manager support to build up presence in larger grocery retailers
and expand the wholesaler network
Other markets: Key Account Manager team based in Greece working with large retailers/wholesalers
Launch an umbrella Greek Diet international campaign for priority processed and non-processed categories;
12
establish the GreekDiet.com website with links to major Greece related and food related sites
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
Exhibit 55
55
Retail sales1
2009; million
-5%<CAGR<+5%
CAGR>+5%
10.00
Market prioritization
criteria:
Size of local retail
market for selected
food processing
categories
Size of Greek
Diaspora population
that could drive
demand for Greek
products
Number of tourist
arrivals to Greece
by destination
Current size of
Greek exports in
selected subcategories in target
countries
Top priority
Priority
N. America
France&Belgium
Focus/target
markets
UK
Scandinavia
Australia
CEE
1.00
Balkans
Priority 1
North America
Germany &
Austria
UK
Balkans
Italy3
Russia
Turkey
Iberia
Priority 2
Italy
France & Belgium
Scandinavia
Australia
CEE (selectively)
Russia4
S. America
0.10
S.Africa
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
120
125
130
56
Greece 10 Years Ahead has identified nine priorities and measures grouped in four major strategic
themes (Exhibit 58):
Sharpening Greece's market and product strategy. First, target export markets are prioritized:
Priority 1 markets are Germany, Scandinavia, Netherlands, the UK, Russia and Austria; Priority 2
markets are Iberia (Spain and Portugal), Italy, Balkans and (Romania, Bulgaria) and North America
(TBC). Moreover, Greece should consider pursuing a differentiated category strategy based on the
fundamentals of four product clusters (Exhibit 59):
Export Engines and Emerging Traders including competitive products such as
peaches, nectarines, oranges, seed cotton, kiwis, potatoes, apples. For these categories
pursue competitiveness and quality standardization/certification programs and expand the
production scale; while also exploring the use of idle public land to resolve land constraints.
Domestic/processed focused includes olives, tomatoes and sugar where emphasis
should be placed on creating and modernizing processing capacity with the primary objective
of import substitution and eventually export growth.
Consumption/import majors includes heavy importers such as wheat, maize and other
cereals whose high local cost needs to be addressed to reduce the level of imports while
investigating the possibility of land reallocation to higher export potential products.
Improving competitiveness through scale, productivity and quality. This involves revisiting
arable land allocation to products, potentially utilizing idle publicly-owned land (e.g., with long
term leasing) to increase scale, and introducing modern methods to boost land productivity while
providing relevant incentives that are output and result-based (e.g., proven capacity and production, investments in modern methods). The launch of a new standardization and certification
mechanism for agricultural products and methods (including biological farming) would also be
critical.
Ensuring international market access and presence. This involves establishing the Greek
Foods Company (private company or PPP) to pool production, coordinate, establish and
manage distribution networks abroad (same platform as in the food processing sector). The
Greek Foods Company would be particularly relevant for the growth of the Crops Agriculture
sector given the small size of existing units and cooperatives. Moreover, Greece could launch the
Greek Diet campaign starting with Priority 1 markets.
Revamping capabilities. This involves reinforcing Agriculture (and Aquaculture) University
education, and creating an Agricultural Development Institute to disseminate and promote
know-how and innovation to agricultural units and cooperatives. Finally, introducing incentives
for new farmers focused on scale and export-oriented farming, to rejuvenate the labor force and
create additional employment opportunities.
In a 10 year horizon, the annual incremental (direct and indirect) GVA (versus 2010) is estimated to be
4.5 billion, employment could increase by an additional 140,000 jobs and the trade balance could
improve by approximately 2.7 billion.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
57
Exhibit 56
ESTIMATES
None/ Light/
Moderate
Severe/
Very severe
22
8
Production volume
Million tons
135
28
Production value
99
24
bn
28.3
6.8
Arable land2
25.8
4.0
Million hectares
12.4
7.1
2.1
0.21
0.26
2.7
1.1
12
Land degradation
0.17
52%
72%
61%
79%
48%
28%
39%
21%
Exhibit 57
Spain
2007 actual
000s
20072 actual
Hectares/unit
Growth 03-07
Percent
-1
940
182
Germany
349
-3
France
491
-3
Greece
711
48.4
55.7
34
4,775
18.3
1,383
EU-15
Growth 03-07
Percent
25.9
-9
Portugal
Italy
ESTIMATES
9.0
-1
25.2
5.6
-1
~27
Note: 2007 data are the latest available
1 With at least 1,200 of standard gross margins monthly
SOURCE: Eurostat
58
High priority
Exhibit 58
A
Sharpening
Greece's market
and product
strategy
Prioritize target export markets - Priority 1: Germany, Scandinavia, Netherlands, UK, Russia, Austria;
1
Priority 2: Spain, Portugal, Italy, Balkans (e.g., Romania, Bulgaria), North America (TBC)
Pursue a differentiated category strategy based on the fundamentals of four product clusters:
2
Export Engines & Emerging Traders: Pursue cost competitiveness and quality standardization/
certification program; materially expand production scale; explore the use of publicly owned land
maize for quicker import reduction; explore land reallocation and pool higher import levels for lower prices
Step-improving
competitiveness
through scale,
productivity and
quality
production capacity and scale-up production units in suitable geographies to become more competitive
Provide output incentives (e.g., export rebates) to stimulate production scale and technological innovation
Incentivize young farmers and agricultural entrepreneurship
4
Introduce a new standardization and quality certification mechanism for agricultural products/methods
(including biological farming) at unit and cooperative-level;
C
Ensuring
international
market access and
strong presence
Establish the Greek Foods Company (GFC) (private or PPP with private sector control); tasks to include:
Define the network of primary units per category and pool their production output
Determine suitable market coverage model per country (and category)
Establish and manage wholesale and retailer networks per country/region
Operate (and differentiate according to priority) a key account management coverage model
Set-up/operate a limited retail store network (Greek Corners); high traffic locations in priority 1 markets
Manage the domestic logistics chain (including distribution and storage) and execute exports
Launch an umbrella Greek Diet international campaign for priority processed and non-processed categories
6
Accelerate the global introduction of the Made in Greece origin certification mechanism
7
D
Developing sector
capabilities and
supporting
mechanisms
Reinforce Agriculture (and Aquaculture) University education (undergraduate, graduate); cover growth
8
relevant functions and establish strong international links and joint R&D programs
Establish the Agricultural Development Institute to lead and operate the standardization and quality
9
certification mechanism (see #4) and engage in the dissemination of productivity and innovation know-how
and capability building programs for S&M agricultural units and cooperatives (in cooperation with GFC)
McKinsey & Company
Exhibit 59
III
Consumption &
Import majors
Boost production
efficiency/cut costs
Reduce trade
deficit; exploit
maize for quicker
import reduction
Units consolidation
and modernization
Explore land
reallocation; pool
higher imports for
lower prices
Emerging
Traders
Ramp-up local
production
Boost exports to
priority markets
Substitute part of
imports
Consolidate to
further reduce
costs (e.g.,
potatoes)
Production in
Thousand tons
II
Greece1
6,000
5,500
5,000
Cereals2
4,500
4,000
Tomatoes
3,500
3,000
Olives
2,500
SUMMARY
Domestic &
processed focused
Competitive
position allows for
higher exports
either in bulk or
preferably
processed
Materially expand
and modernize
processing
capacity
Maize
2,000
IV
II
Wheat
1,500
IV
1,000
Potatoes
500
III
Apples
0
-40
-30
-20
Oranges
Sugar
-10
20
30
Kiwis
40
50
Net exports
Net imports
(Exports Imports)/Production1
Percent
Export Engines
Materially expand
production scale
Quality
standardization/
certification and
cost
competitiveness
program
Explore the use of
publicly owned land
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
59
60
We have identified 10 possible priorities and reforms to be considered by the Greek state and market
participants, grouped in two major strategic themes (Exhibit 66):
Further reinforcing competition, investment and regulatory compliance. This involves proactively defining commercial zones in urban and suburban areas to facilitate commerce investments (preliminary evidence suggests that larger single store formats are likely to have a more
positive contribution to Greece's GVA compared to larger multi-store formats). Also, lifting constraints for retailers to sell currently restricted product categories (e.g., OTC drugs, baby food) and
further improving price transparency, by increasing the awareness of existing tools such as the
Price Observatory, and creating platforms for comparing price/performance such as Germanys
Stiftung Warentest. Increasing the capacity of the Competition Committee and extending informality controls on unlicensed traders would also improve competition and regulatory compliance.
Boosting retailer and wholesaler productivity would require both managerial and regulatory
adjustments. Managerial changes include expanding the scale of existing players through further
consolidation and partnerships (e.g., purchasing clusters) among small & medium enterprises,
while pursuing targeted investments in IT, logistics and e-commerce to step-change value chain
efficiency. Regulation wise Greece needs to accelerate the full liberalization of public road transport, simplify unnecessary reporting requirements and eliminate remaining retail-specific labor
rigidities (e.g., employee mobility across stores, split daily shifts).
In terms of growth upside, in a ten year horizon, retail productivity could increase by 22% and annual
retail sales (grocery, apparel, appliances) could grow by an extra 1.5 billion. At total economy level,
the incremental (versus 2010) GVA uplift could reach 4.3 billion (2.6 billion direct and 1.7 billion
indirect), while tax revenues could increase by 1.3 billion.
Exhibit 60
ESTIMATES
Greeces difference from
EU-151 weighted average
28
30
28
30
25
26
24
27
18
16
22
21
16
30
29
28
27
27
26
26
23
22
22
18
18
17
14
EU-151
IT
SP
IE
AT
UK
GR
PR
FN
FN
BL
FR
DN
SW
NT
DE
-34%
-39%
939
698
737
725
762
722
648
481
469
589
345
448
325
374
982
828
770
762
694
674
659
648
563
559
483
455
383
339
306
SW
IE
NT
DN
EU-151
FR
DE
SP
FN
IT
PR
GR
BL
AT
UK
-41%
-43%
Note that, in terms of GVA per employee, the relative performance of Greece could be higher because of lower part-time
labor and subsequently higher number of hours per employee
Note: Retail sector as per NACE 52 according to Rev 1.1
1 EU-15 weighted average excluding Luxembourg; 2 Not including undeclared employment and unreported output; 3 Not including unreported output
SOURCE: Eurostat (employment, GVA, average working hours); EU KLEMS (Deflators, PPP); Euromonitor (selling space)
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
61
Exhibit 61
ESTIMATES
Greeces difference from
EU-152 weighted average
26
32
26
26
30
28
25
23
25
17
18
15
20
16
18
28
26
26
26
24
21
20
20
18
17
16
14
14
-27%
-34%
3
Clothes
NACE
52.41,
52.42,
52.43
Department
stores
NACE
52.12
Pharmacies
NACE
52.3
31
28
27
28
26
22
28
30
19
24
22
25
18
23
23
16
27
27
27
26
22
22
22
21
19
19
18
14
-31%
-36%
2
30
27
23
27
31
27
21
25
24
24
21
18
19
25
20
20
19
11
25
25
23
23
22
20
20
19
17
17
16
14
-18%
-25%
3
32
39
42
38
36
38
34
27
32
31
28
34
31
21
28
16
25
21
35
32
30
30
28
28
28
24
22
21
21
18
-34%
-41%
3
1 Not including undeclared employment and unreported output; 2 2000 prices; 3 EU-15 weighted average excluding Luxembourg
SOURCE: Eurostat (employment, GVA, average working hours); EU KLEMS (Deflators, PPP)
McKinsey & Company
Exhibit 62
ESTIMATES
GVA per capita (CAGR, 19852005) minus hours worked per capita (CAGR, 19852005)1
Percentage points
Ireland
4.0
Sweden
3.6
Finland
3.2
Denmark
3.1
UK
2.8
Portugal
2.8
2.0
Italy
Austria
2.0
France
1.6
Spain
1.5
Germany
1.3
Netherlands
0.9
Belgium
0.8
Luxembourg
Greece
0.0
-0.1
EU-15 = 2.0
1 Productivity measure comparing growth in GVA per capita (output) with growth in hours per capita (input)
SOURCE: EU KLEMS
62
Exhibit 63
ESTIMATES
10-15
9-10
2-5
Estimated
productivity
gap vs.
EU-151
Format mix
Retailers
operating
efficiency
5-10
Exhibit 64
U.S.
Hypermarkets
Discounters
Supermarkets
Traditional
formats
116
77
68
87
55
76
69
100% =
26.5
Spain
27
73
95.3
Italy
26
74
119.0
48%
104
89
48
37%
126
65
88
52
Greece
Portugal
Germany
ESTIMATES
22%
21
79
19.6
Germany
15
85
171.0
France
13
87
197.6
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
63
Exhibit 65
280
-38%
Load
capacity
Tons
27
-4%
26
Load factor
% of load
capacity
56
+34%
75
Empty travel
ratio
% of travels
22
+45%
32
Apparent
speed
Km/h worked
24
-46%
ESTIMATES
173
13
Exhibit 66
B
Boosting retailers
and wholesalers
productivity
High priority
64
Exhibit 67
Opportunity indicators
Aquaculture
Medical tourism
BRIEF SUMMARY
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
65
Exhibit 68
Opportunity indicators
Waste
management
BRIEF SUMMARY
The remaining of this report provides a very brief overview of the opportunities, challenges and proposed measures related to the rising stars.
At this point we need to mention that these eight rising stars are prioritized after having analyzed
more than 20 sub-sectors as possible candidates.
66
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
67
Exhibit 69
In the global generics industry several business models exist NOT EXHAUSTIVE
with specific characteristics along the 4 competitive dimensions
Competitive dimensions
Gx business model
1
Large integrated
player
2 Strong regional/
local player
3 Globally present,
locally strong
4 CRAMS1 player
5 Niche player
Private
Marketing label
6 and distribution
Marketing
players
company
A Presence along
value chain
B Geographical
footprint
C Product
portfolio
D Scale
Examples
Global
Highly
Large
Teva, Sandoz,
Local to
Diversified
Medium
Stada, Watson,
Global
Diversified
Medium
Zydus Cadila,
Local to global
Diversified
Small to
Piramal Health-
Local to global
Highly
Small
Hospira, Baxter,
Marketing and
Regional to
Diversified
Small to
Alliance,
Marketing and
Regional to
Diversified
Medium
Actavis, Meda
chain player
chain player
facturing player
facturing player
facturing player
distribution player
distribution player
regional
global
global
diversified
specialized
medium
medium
Mylan, Ranbaxy
Zentiva, KRKA,
Gedeon Richter
Lupin, Cipla,
Wockhardt
care, Jubilant,
Divis
Abraxis
McKesson,
Walgreens
Penetrating high potential export markets. The Greek pharmaceutical sector has been
significantly extrovert, and is placed in the Top 5 of manufacturing sub-sectors in terms of
exports. With generics exports already estimated at 250 million, Greek players could further
increase their activities abroad, both in neighboring countries and selected mature Western
healthcare systems, where niche opportunities exist (e.g., Balkans, UK, Germany, France,
Russia). This would help them safeguard and increase their revenue levels and increase scale and
capacity utilization, while also adding an element of diversification to their activities. While some
of this can be achieved through organic growth, reaching the necessary scale and market access
might also require a plan of targeted acquisitions.
Securing access to alternative financing sources. Most of the priorities pertaining to the
requirements described above will need significant capital that is currently lacking in the sector,
given the difficulty of obtaining bank financing, the current debt levels of the Greek state towards
pharmaceuticals companies and the state of the local capital markets. Greek companies could
turn towards Private Equity or Venture Capital financing. The Greek state should consider
addressing the funding challenges by reviewing the current settlement of pending debts in VAT
reimbursement or other repayments to pharmaceutical companies, in order to increase, to the
extent possible, the liquidity available to the industry and decrease its financing cost and working
capital requirements.
68
4.2.2. Aquaculture
Although still relatively small in size, with GVA of approximately 400 million in 2010, aquaculture is
growing at around 3% per year, with 80% of production exported. About 90% of domestic aquaculture production is in just two products, sea bass and sea bream, for which Greece produces almost
half of the global output.
Due to the nature of the products (small size of fish) and relative lack of sophisticated processing
by local players, the Greek products are exported primarily in bulk or lightly processed form, while
the high certification costs and the resulting low adoption of such certification have not allowed the
effective branding of Greek production in international markets. At the same time, despite the competitive cost position of Greek players overall, also due to increased vertical integration, the sector is
already facing stiff competition from lower labor cost countries such as Turkey. Furthermore, local
players have not managed to effectively balance the supply and demand cycles, leading to massive
price fluctuations (+/- 33% between 2000 and 2009) and uncontrolled consolidation.
In addition, an unstable regulatory environment, the lack of clear licensing procedures and the absence
of a clear zoning plan for the sector threaten the industrys growth prospects. At the same time, Turkey
is ramping up production and threatens to exceed Greek output in the next two years.
To strengthen the competitiveness of the Greek fish farming industry and further boost extroversion,
Greek players and the Greek state should consider focusing on the following key priorities:
Pursuing a phased product and market strategy, in order to: (i) defend leadership position in
sea bass and sea bream in core European markets (e.g., Germany, Italy, Spain, France, UK); (ii)
expand geographic coverage (existing products) in Europe (i.e., the Netherlands, Russia, Ukraine,
Poland), US and Japan; and (iii) broaden product portfolio into mussels and larger-size, highervalue-added fish categories leveraging current know-how (Exhibit 70). To facilitate entry in new
markets, the state could support effective international representation and sponsorship (e.g.,
road-shows in Russia, US and Japan similar to Norways case example of promoting salmon for
sushi to Asia in the 1980s), as well as the introduction and enforcement of a commonly accepted
certification procedure, initiative to be jointly pursued by the state and market participants.
Building competitiveness through scale, product focus and labor efficiency, through
the acceleration of the consolidation trend, following a focused product strategy for the core
business and the introduction of labor efficiency measures to offset cost disadvantage versus
strong competitors such as Turkey. In this area, a nation-wide zoning plan is critical to clearly
indicate eligible areas for aquaculture activity, while focused incentives could be developed to
promote targeted R&D, higher export activity and the ramp up of production capacity.
Ensuring systematic planning and regulatory compliance, to avoid excessive oversupply and
major price volatility. This requires the development of a robust national capacity plan and
allocation mechanism agreed among players and its enforcement through strict controls.
In a 10 year horizon, the growth potential of aquaculture as a rising star is significant as the sector's
GVA could more than triple from 0.4 to 1.4 billion creating more than 20,000 new jobs.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
69
Exhibit 70
Aquaculture: Phased product & market strategy and priorities for Greece
Market focus
European markets
Core/
existing
products
New
products
Non-European/off-shore markets
Promote existing product portfolio and
simple variations of it to offshore
markets in combination with other
Greek products:
US: Target top-10 metropolitan areas by
population, leveraging Greek diaspora
and building on existing/emerging export
activity
Japan/China: Focus on mid-market
range segment through products in
frozen form; target high-end segment
(mainly in Japan) with high quality fresh
products and guaranteed service levels
Further penetrate offshore markets
(mainly Asia) through:
Focus on high-value adding products
(e.g., bluefin tuna)
Fast growing species (for processing)
such as yellowtail
70
Exhibit 71
Description
Example
categories
Healthcare where
admittance to the
hospital and stay for
a period ranging from
several days to
weeks
Usually refers to
heavier, acute and/or
invasive cases
Hospitalization for
less than 24 hours,
where patient visits
hospital facility for
diagnosis and
treatment
Usually refers to
lighter invasive cases
Outpatient
Cardiovascular
Oncology
Orthopedics
Change
2012E1-2009
100% =
Cosmetic
Eye surgery
Dental
ESTIMATES
~13%
~16%
14-18
4-5
~0.1
Inpatient
2-3
Outpatient
12-15
Spend
billion
~4-5
Trips
Millions
1 Estimates
SOURCE: Deloitte; McKinsey Quarterly
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
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71
In line also with the new strategic direction in tourism, there are five levers that would enable the local
industry to capture the growth opportunity presented by Medical Tourism:
Developing a national strategy to position Greece in the middle market with specific
product and market focus. This could include a primarily outpatient product focus, (e.g., eye
surgery, cosmetics, fertility, obesity, haemodialysis), with only a focused inpatient offer (e.g.,
cardiovascular surgery, hip replacement), and geographic focus on Russia/CEE, Balkans,
Middle East, and selected higher-cost EU countries (e.g., UK, Germany). This should also entail
securing international accreditations (e.g., JCI) and partnerships with global medical centers/
organizations and leading international medical institutions (such as the Johns Hopkins Hospital,
the Cleveland Clinic, Sloan Kettering and the Harvard Medical School, or institutions focusing
in Eastern Mediterranean, such as the Japanese-built Tokuda Hospital in Sofia), to significantly
raise the profile of Greek hospital operators abroad. Medical tourism should be promoted to the
aforementioned target countries, including the sponsoring of participation in relevant medical
tourism conferences, but also the signing of bilateral agreements with foreign payors (public for
non-EU, private for EU and non-EU) to support the new market. Creating a strong brand and
reputation for Greece as a medical tourism destination would be key to the success of the new
strategy.
Establishing modern quality assurance, licensing and control frameworks, in particular
for outpatient services, including a registry to track patients and procedures (e.g., for fertility).
It would also be important to implement a quality assurance system that would satisfy the
requirements of EU directives, improve the quality perception of Greek clinics, and potentially
facilitate the reimbursement of cross-border treatments in Greece. Likewise, the current
restrictive regime of licensing facility and surgery eligibility procedures (e.g., allowing surgeries
only in hospitals of over 60 beds) could be updated to allow more flexibility (e.g., facilities in
islands, same-day surgery centers) and result to reduced costs for procedures that require up to
one day of hospitalization without however jeopardizing medical care quality.
Pursuing and maintaining offer specialization to reduce costs through scale in key procedures. There are multiple examples of specialization and focus on efficient delivery of high
throughput procedures at good quality and low cost. An example is Turkeys World Eye Hospital,
that handles over 5,500 eye surgeries a month, including 2,000 international patients.
Leveraging networks to attract inbound volumes. The presence of Greek healthcare providers
abroad provides a good basis to promote the Greek healthcare offering. Other international
examples from leading medical centers show that there is an opportunity to attract patients for
specialized treatment into the country by enhancing alliances with medical providers and funds in
key countries and non-medical partners (e.g., specialized tour operators).
Complementing the offer with the necessary auxiliary services for medical tourists, such as
multilingual support, logistics support, informatics/online consultations and electronic patient
record sharing, as well as closer links to the travel industry (for the wellness tourism). This could
also include the development of integrated health resorts, where multiple treatments can be
offered to individuals and groups across the spectrum of health and wellbeing services.
It is estimated that in a 10 year horizon medical tourism could contribute 450 million in additional
annual GVA and 11,000 new jobs to the Greek economy.
72
Exhibit 72
GERMANY EXAMPLE
82
million
>65
20
45-65
26
15-45
40
<15
14
Population
236
billion
47
Multi-morbidity
is a key driver
of healthcare
costs in
the elderly
27
20
6
Total medical costs
SOURCE: Milliman; German Federal Statistics Office; 11th coordinated population forecast, 2006 data
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
73
Emerging practices navigate towards integrated (as opposed to episode-based) care management,
moving care (where appropriate) closer to the patient. This is achieved by providing long-term,
prevention-focused care in the community (or at home), moving it away from high cost hospital settings.
Integrated care models in countries such as the UK and the US demonstrate ability to contain cost
growth while providing quality care by: (i) supporting independent living for elderly and chronically ill
patients through care-at-home and case/disease management programs; (ii) providing enhanced
assisted living services to elderly patients in tailored nursing and residential units, focusing much more
on prevention; and (iii) providing comprehensive rehabilitation services to improve outcomes and speed
of recovery, and reduce clinically avoidable readmissions (e.g., services may include physical therapy,
occupational therapy, pharmacological support, and mental health services).
Building on these global trends, we have identified a number of possible measures and reforms grouped
in four major strategic themes:
Developing a robust sector strategy focusing on high potential areas. A national strategy for longterm conditions and care of the elderly could include the development of a full range of products,
covering related fields (e.g., case/disease management, care at home, rehabilitation, assisted living services). The state could focus on developing a blueprint for disease management and integrated care programs, developing clear clinical pathways and therapeutic protocols and robust
quality accreditation system for out-of-hospital healthcare provision, updating the law articulating
requirements for Elderly Care and Long-Term Conditions Management operations, and conducting selected pilots to test approach core programs.
Building relevant capabilities and supporting mechanisms. Greek providers could seek and adopt
international best practices in areas such as telemedicine/telehealth and process optimization.
Greece could do so through partnerships with leading international organizations in the field, to
support in particular rural and remote populations, and the elderly living alone. A further step
would be the development of risk management tools, including risk stratification and management in order to support effective case/disease management policies and application of integrated care healthcare programs. Specialist training is critical in order to empower staff to deliver a
high quality service, e.g., on remote healthcare consultation or adherence monitoring. The Greek
state could also help by creating comprehensive patient registries, introducing risk profiling and
management tools as a minimum, and identifying and addressing gaps in healthcare workforce to
fast-track industry development.
Boosting product attractiveness and awareness for all involved parties (investors, service providers and patients). It would be important to invest in promotion of services locally to build awareness of initiatives that may be new in some areas (e.g., case management). The state and market
players would need to build awareness through targeted campaigns and provide incentives for
higher participation in these programs. Greece could also find creative ways to build attractive
products for an international audience, e.g., bundling LTC/elderly care and medical tourism services for patients who may be exploring relocation and retirement abroad. This growing trend in
Europe could make Greece an attractive destination and leader in the field (Medical Tourism).
Assisted living and care at home services can both support and benefit from an effort to attract
European retirees for potential relocation to Greek destinations.
Securing and enabling access to diverse financing sources. Enabling Greek companies to access
diverse sources of capital, including for instance Private Equity or Venture Capital financing could
help build significant growth momentum in the market. Providers need to build awareness and
co-operate with private insurers towards the large-scale introduction of out-of-hospital care cov-
74
erage in the offered insurance packages, that would benefit patients and insurers in terms of cost
control. They can also protect their profitability and margins by effectively targeting and capturing
affluent patient segments potentially interested in premium services, through targeted campaigns
and promotions in Greece and abroad. Last, the Greek state could also focus on rationalizing
reimbursement policies and introducing targeted payor programs to facilitate funding release and
public contribution.
Our estimates suggest that in a 10 year horizon the combined impact of growth in the various subsegments of the market could enable sector revenues of 665 million, as well as significant savings in
current acute spend of 670 million. Incremental annual impact (direct and indirect) on GVA could reach
approximately 1 billion and approximately 24,000 new jobs. The trade balance would improve by 100
million and the fiscal balance by 400 million.
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
75
Exhibit 73
67
Germany
67
Netherlands
66
Switzerland
51
Sweden
50
Finland
36
United Kingdom
34
53
12
57
Greece
18
Hungary
17
74
75
78
80
63
19
75
8
84
16
Turkey
87
13
Cyprus
Slovakia
12
Bulgaria
10
5
60
10
20
Portugal
36
32
22
Slovenia
41
52
25
Romania
19
12
25
Poland
59
31
Spain
51
32
France
Czech Republic
49
36
Italy
19
46
40
EU-27
33
30
41
Ireland
1
2
32
44
Denmark
Landfilled
32
51
Norway
78
11
Incinerated
29
62
Belgium
Recycled/composted
90
12
83
Upscaling and upgrading recycling and other alternative (to landfilling) capacity. This involves
accelerating consolidation of small recycling players to increase efficiency/viability, enabling
the introduction of composting and incineration infrastructure, launching additional tenders for
Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) to handle waste in Greece, creating a level playing field for
alternatives to landfilling, and making regulatory adjustments, so as to allow industries to use processed waste as fuel;
Ensuring systematic regulatory compliance and planning. Measures would include introducing
a compliance gatekeeper and providing training for the regional and city administrators that are
responsible for the integrated waste management plan.
The growth upside for the domestic Waste Management sector can be substantial. We estimate that
the annual impact on GVA could reach approximately 0.6 billion, while more than 11,000 new jobs
could be created in a 10 year horizon.
76
There are three major container trade flows globally, with Asia-to-Europe
exhibiting the second highest growth
TEU mil, 2009
12.8
Europe/Asia
8.7
Transpacific
6.0
Transatlantic
4.9
Transatlantic
Europe/
Asia
Transpacific
Transpacific
18.9
19.2
19.2
3.9
3.9
2.9
2.9
19.2
3.0
7.0
52.1
SOURCE: Drewry
2.6
Intra-Asia
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
77
Thessaloniki for import customs clearance and discharge port handling while it takes 6 or fewer days in
competing ports). (ii) in terms of cost competitiveness, while freight costs (e.g., from China) are relatively
in line, customs clearance costs are the highest in the region and hinterland transportation cost is high
from Piraeus; (iii) as far as capabilities are concerned, the Greek sector is under-penetrated by global
players, and beyond some notable niche exceptions educational programs specialized in transportation and logistics are not sufficient.
We have identified eight possible priorities and measures to boost the growth of the sector in the next
decade grouped in four strategic themes:
Enhancing Greeces strategic relevance and supporting transport infrastructure. This would further leverage partnerships with large cargo operators and introduce concessions for developing,
operating, and managing port facilities and its key infrastructure. Given Thessalonikis strong relevance as a gateway port, it would be important for the international partner to be able to secure
large trade volumes to the Balkans, Central and Eastern Europe. Moreover, the necessary rail
infrastructure needs to be developed (e.g., Patra-Piraeus-Thessaloniki-Evzoni/Kipi high speed
cargo rail connection) and the motorway network to be completed.
Improving port infrastructure and operational attractiveness. Monitor planned capacity expansion at Piraeus (i.e., 3.6 million TEUs in 2014 and 4.7 million TEUs in 2016) while accelerating the
capacity expansion at Thessaloniki (i.e., 1.24 million TEUs). Targeted infrastructure additions and
enhancements are required to increase effectiveness and efficiency of operations in both Piraeus
and Thessaloniki ports (e.g., large container ships cannot currently embark at Thessaloniki due to
depth). Both Piraeus and Thessaloniki need to assess the adequacy of their storage capacity as
well as the number and length of cranes (quay and yard) to cater for future needs. Finally, Greek
ports should ensure information availability and transparency by establishing an electronic platform inter-connecting commercial and regulatory systems for trade & logistics (e.g., in line with
competing ports such as Constanza).
Ensuring cost competitiveness. Greek ports need to optimize handling charges, port fees, customs costs and, administrative burdens against demand elasticity and leverage technology to
reduce the time and cost requirements for port handling. Administrative processes related to customs clearance and port handling need simplification and lower charges.
Building sector critical capabilities. This involves revamping the transportation & logistics university education and promoting the creation of a logistics cluster in Greece; to support the development of the logistics cluster, Greece could attract major regional R&D programs as well as
offering specific allowances and incentives for foreign companies to develop their logistics base
in Greece.
The transformation of Piraeus and Thessaloniki into hubs would have substantial positive impact on the
Greek economy adding approximately 1.3 billion of annual Gross Value Added (GVA) and creating a
minimum of 9,000 new jobs in a 10 year horizon.
78
Greece 10 Years Ahead: Defining Greeces new growth model and strategy Executive summary
Laying the foundations in key economic sectors
79
80
80