Un Pan 023214
Un Pan 023214
Un Pan 023214
GREECE
Public Administration
Country Profile
May 2004
All papers, statistics and materials contained in the Country Profiles express entirely the opinion of the mentioned authors.
They should not, unless otherwise mentioned, be attributed to the Secretariat of the United Nations.
The designations employed and the presentation of material on maps in the Country Profiles do not imply the expression
of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country,
territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents........................................................................................... 1
Greece ......................................................................................................... 2
1
GREECE
Greece
Click here for detailed map
Government type
Parliamentary republic
Independence
1829 (from the Ottoman
Empire)
Constitution
11 June 1975; amended
March 1986 and April 2001
(click here)
Legal system
Based on codified Roman law;
judiciary divided into civil,
criminal, and administrative
courts
Administrative divisions
13 regions and 51 prefectures
Source: The World Factbook - Greece
(nomos) and 1 autonomous
I n 1967 a putsch took place resulting in a region (Agion Oros - Mount
military dictatorship. Political personalities were Athos)
arrested, thrown in jail and sent to exile. The Source: The World Factbook - Greece
military junta abolished the 1952 Constitution as
well as most
political liberties, imposed censorship to the media, and abolished political parties.
Student revolts broke out in the fall of 1973 and in July 1974 the junta resigned.
After a nationwide referendum in 1974, the monarchy was abolished and the
constitution took its present form.i The political party of New Democracy (ND), under
the leadership of Costantinos Karamanlis, won the first elections following the
political changeover.
In the 1977 elections ND won again, while the Panhellenic Social Party (PASOK),
under the leadership of Andreas Papandreou, came in as the second major party.
Greece officially became a member of the European Community in 1981. In the
parliamentary elections in October the same year PASOK won a decisive victory, and
Andreas Papandreou became the first socialist Prime Minister of the country.
The 2004 elections ended the PASOK rule that had lasted since 1993.ii
Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Modern Greece
2
1. General Information
Population a
Female estimated adult (15+) illiteracy rate (%), 1991 4.1 10.1 3.2 2
Male estimated adult (15+) illiteracy rate (%), 1991 1.5 5.3 1.5 2
Employment e
iv v
Female adult (+15) economic activity rate (%), 2001 38 54 40 2
iv v
Male adult (+15) economic activity rate (%), 2001 61 71 66 2
Notes: i Second quarter of year; ii 2000, Data with an error of more than 20% are not published; iii
Age 16+ years; iv
De jure population; v
Age 16+
years, Excluding conscripts, De jure population
GDP a
GDP implicit price deflator (annual % growth), 2003 3.8 3.3 4.3
Private consumption (% of GDP), 2002 67.3 .. 57.9
Government consumption (% of GDP), 2002 15.8 .. 17.6
i
Notes: 1999
1
United Nations Statistics Division:
a
Statistics Division and Population Division of the UN Secretariat; b Statistics Division and Population Division of the UN
Secretariat; c Population Division of the UN Secretariat; d1 UNESCO ; d2 UNESCO; e1 ILO; e2 ILO/OECD
2
World Bank - Data and Statistics:
a
Quick Reference Tables; b Data Profile Tables ; c Country at a Glance
3
1.3 Public Spending Greece Portugal Spain
Public expenditures 3
3
UNDP - Human Development Report 2002
a
Data refer to total public expenditure on education, including current and capital expenditures.
b
As a result of a number of limitations in the data, comparisons of military expenditure data over time and across
countries should be made with caution. For detailed notes on the data see SIPRI (2001).
4
Averages for regions and sub regions are only generated if data is available for at least 35% of the countries in that
region or sub region.
5
Excluding education, health and police – if available (view Country Sources for further explanations).
4
2. Legal Structure
The present form of the political system was ratified in the referendum on 8th
December 1974 when 70% of the population voted in favour of a non-monarchical
democracy. The Constitution currently in force was voted for on 11th June 1975 and
reviewed in both 1986 and 2001. The supreme authority in the Hellenic Republic is
the President, whose wide range of activities characterizes the political system as a
Presidential Democracy.
Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Politics
The legislative powers shall be exercised by the Parliament and the Fact box:
Presidents of the Republic [Article 26(1)]. elections: Elections
last held 7 March
The number of the Members of Parliament is specified by statute; 2004 (next to be held
it cannot, however, be below two hundred or over three hundred.
o
by 2008)
The Members of Parliament are elected through direct, universal election results:
and secret ballot for a term of four consecutive years. percent of vote by
party - ND 45.4%,
The 300 members of the Assembly are elected from fifty-six local PASOK 40.5%, KKE
constituencies, which are represented by from one to 32 seats 5.9%, SIN 3.3%;
according to their population. Candidates are elected under a seats by party – ND
unique "reinforced" proportional representation system. 165, PASOK 117,
KKE 12, SIN 68
Since the 1974 election, 288 members of the Assembly have been
chosen directly on the basis of constituency votes; these members must belong to a
particular constituency and must compete for election. The remaining twelve seats
are occupied by "national deputies," elected at large from party lists in proportion to
the popular vote the parties receive.9
The right to introduce Bills belongs to the Parliament and the Government [Art. 73].
Source: Constitution of the Hellenic Republic
The executive powers shall be exercised by the President of the Republic and the
Government [Article 26(2)]. The President is elected by Parliament for a term of five
years. Re-election of the same person as President is permitted only once.
The person receiving a two-thirds majority of the total number of Members of
Parliament is elected President of the Republic. Should a third ballot fail to produce
6
Source of fact boxes if nothing else stated: The World Factbook - Greece
7
Inter-Parliamentary Union - Women in National Parliaments
8
Electionworld.org - Greece
9
Russians Abroad (Greece) - The Electoral System
5
a three-fifths majority, Parliament shall be dissolved within ten Fact box:
days of the ballot, and elections for a new Parliament shall be chief of state:
called. President
Source: Constitution of the Hellenic Republic Konstandinos (Kostis)
STEPHANOPOULOS
However, no act by the President of the Republic is valid or (since 10 March 1995)
executed without the countersignature of the appropriate minister – 90% of Parliament
with the exception of certain acts specified in the Constitution in vote
article 35, paragraph 2. The last revision of the Constitution on head of government:
March 6, 1986 abolished the super-powers of the President of the Prime Minister Kostas
KARAMANLIS (since
Republic contained in the Constitution of 1975 and made the text
10 March 200410
of Constitution conform to the basic principles of the
parliamentary system.
Source: Greek Embassy in Pakistan - Constitution & Constitution of the Hellenic Republic
The Cabinet constitutes the Government and is composed of the Prime Minister and
the Ministers. The Government defines and directs the general policy of Greece.
Source: Constitution of the Hellenic Republic
10
Prime Minister of the Hellenic Republic & Nea Demokratia
11
Constitution of the Hellenic Republic
6
2.4 Local Government
The Constitution contains two articles concerning the administration of the country:
Article 101 refers to the organization of the administration according to a
decentralized system and contains the constitutional principle of decentralization and
regional administration. Article 102 is an outline of the constitutional frame of local
government and describes its functional guaranties as an independent unit of
administration.
Source: Hellenic Agency for Local Development and Local Government - Local Government
12
Federal Foreign Office (Germany) - Greece
13
Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Politics
7
3. The State and Civil Society
3.1 Ombudsperson
The Greek Ombudsman is a constitutionally sanctioned Independent Authority. It
was founded in October 1998 and operates under the provisions of Law 3094/2003.
The Greek Ombudsman investigates individual administrative actions or omissions or
material actions taken by government departments or public services that infringe
upon the personal rights or violate the legal interests of individuals or legal entities.
The purpose of the Greek Ombudsman is to mediate between public administration
and private individuals, for the purpose of protecting citizens' rights, their ensuring
compliance with the rule of law rights, observe the rule of law, and combating
maladministration. In addition, the mission of the Greek Ombudsman includes
protection and promotion of the rights o f the child. The Ombudsman does not have
the power to impose sanctions or to annul the illegal actions of the public
administration.
As a mediator, the Greek Ombudsman makes recommendations and puts forward
specific proposals towards the public administration.
The complaints citizens submit are investigated in terms of thematic categories,
which correspond to five different areas of activity in the Institution: a) The Human
Rights Department; b) The Health and Social Welfare Department; c) The Quality of
Life Department; d) The State-Citizen Relations Department; and e) The Children's
Rights Department.
Source: The Greek Ombudsman - Role and Mission
3.2 NGOs
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4. Civil Service
Click here for the Ministry of the Interior, Public Administration and
Decentralization.14
4.2 Recruitment
The hiring proceedings are carried out by an independent administrative authority.
The Ministry of the Interior, Public Administration and Decentralization coordinates
the human resources planning in the framework of the general government policy
according to the actual needs of the services.
The filling of vacancies is governed by the principles of equal participation
opportunities, meritocracy, objectivity, social solidarity, transparency and publicity.
The filling of vacancies takes place by public competition, in writing and exceptionally
oral, or according to the order of precedence on the basis of clearly defined criteria.
The hiring proceedings require prior announcement, which must be published in a
special issue of the official Gazette of the Hellenic Republic. A summary of the
announcement is published in the Press and broadcasted by other mass media.
Civil servants are appointed by decision of the competent Minister, unless the law
provides otherwise. A summary of the appointment act will be published in the
Official Gazette and notified to the appointee at the latest within thirty days from the
date of publication.
Civil servants of the public sector and civil servants working for legal persons of
public law and appointed to posts provided by law will be required to spend a two-
year trial period of probation, during which they may be dismissed on grounds
pertaining to their service only upon decision of the civil service council. During
probation, civil servants are required to follow introductory training programs. Within
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In Greek
9
three months of the completion of the probation period, the civil service council is
required to decide whether the civil servants on probation qualify for permanency.
Civil servants qualifying for permanency become permanent by act of the body
responsible for their appointment.
The Code further regulates the possibility of reassignments from one unit to another
under the same authority, the transfer upon request of civil servant or ex officio by
the service as well as secondments in cases of serious and urgent temporary official
needs.
Source: Code of Civil Servants (Law 2683/1999)
4.3 Promotion
According to Article 82 of the Code, civil servants are promoted to the immediately
following rank if they have completed the required time of service at their current
rank and if they have the material qualifications for the post. Years of service in one
rank and time of promotion are regulated in article 81 of the Code.
Source: Code of Civil Servants (Law 2683/1999)
4.4 Remuneration
The salary is determined on a monthly basis and aims to allow civil servants to live
decently. Any additional salaries or emoluments of kind of the civil servants may not
exceed the total salary received per month from their post which is provided by law.
Salary is paid in advance at the beginning of each fortnight.
Source: Code of Civil Servants (Law 2683/1999)
4.5 Training
Article 47 of the Code stipulates that service training constitutes a right for civil
servants. Training is effected through the participation of the civil servants in
introductory training programs, personnel training programs, further training
programs and post-graduate studies program or courses.
These programs take place in the framework of the national Public administration
center according to the effective provisions.
Introductory training is compulsory, takes place during the civil servants` period of
probation. Personnel training may be general or offer specialization in the subject-
matter of the civil servants duties. The participation in the personnel training may
also be compulsory.
Further training aims to equip civil servants with the specialized knowledge
necessary towards the performance of their duties. It takes place at public or private
institutes in Greece or abroad.
Post-graduate studies take place through the participation of civil servants in
postgraduate programs or courses in recognized Greek or foreign Universities.
Source: Code of Civil Servants (Law 2683/1999)
4.6 Gender
Gender balance in decision-making positions in national government and central
administration in Greece (total of 13 out of 18 Ministries):
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National Government based on level:
National Government
Senior Ministers Junior Ministers N-115 Level N-216 Level
Persons (%) Persons (%) (%) (%)
Women 1 5 2 7 20 25
Men 18 95 27 93 80 75
Source: European Commission (Employment & Social Affairs) - Political Domain & Public and Juridical Domain
Central Administration
Basic, Economic, Infrastructure, Socio-cultural,
4 ministries (%) 2 ministries (%) 3 ministries (%) 4 ministries (%)
15
One level below Minister
16
Two levels below Minister
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5. Ethics and Civil Service
5.1 Corruption
2003 CPI Score relates to perceptions of the degree of corruption as seen by
business people and country analysts and ranges between 10 (highly clean) and 0
(highly corrupt).
Surveys Used: Refers to the number of surveys that were used to assess a country's performance. 17 surveys were
used and at least 3 surveys were required for a country to be included in the CPI.
Standard Deviation: Indicates differences in the values of the sources. Values below 0.5 indicate agreement, values
between 0.5 and c. 0.9 indicate some agreement, while values equal or larger than 1 indicate disagreement.
High-Low Range: Provides the highest and lowest values of the sources.
Number Institutions: Refers to the number of independent institutions that assessed a country's performance. Since
some institutions provided more than one survey.
90 percent confidence range: Provides a range of possible values of the CPI score. With 5 percent probability the score
is above this range and with another 5 percent it is below.
In the 2002 Evaluation Report on Greece, Greek officials state that “the Greek
Government has made one if it’s main priorities the development of a legal
framework for fighting corruption and the implementation of policies to promote
transparency in all public sector activities and effectively tackle the phenomenon of
corruption”.
No official study has been made of the extent and nature of corruption in Greece.
According to the Greek authorities the detection of corruption is hindered by the
reticence of citizens to report corruption related incidents. In an opinion poll
conducted by the Greek section of Transparency International in 2001, around 80%
of the persons questioned considered Greek society to be affected by corruption.
According to the same poll, the public sectors particularly affected are hospitals and
the tax department. However, the departments responsible for general
administration and the sovereign functions of police and justice are no more immune
than the providers of services.
According to the Ombudsman of the Greek Republic, civil servants enjoy too great a
discretion in regard to the texts they have to apply, or else the procedures are so
lacking in transparency and so open to interpretation that they encourage corruption
among the public who want their administrative problems settled in a reasonable
time.
Greek laws, notably Criminal Code regulate forms of corruption. Definitions provided,
however are generally broad and reflect the relevant international instruments. The
relevant jurisprudence confirms that the advantage obtained through corruption can
be tangible or intangible (professional promotion). The sanctions foreseen are
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generally 1 to 5 years of imprisonment. As a consequence, and according to Greek
law, these are misdemeanors.
The Statistical Department of the Ministry of Justice monitors the effectiveness of the
anti-corruption measures. Apart from the regular institutions in charge of preventing
and prosecuting the general crimes, the Police and the Courts, sustained efforts have
been made in recent years to modernize and enhance the transparency and scrutiny
of the Greek political and administrative system. These efforts have resulted, inter
alia, in the passing of Law in 1997 establishing the Public Administration
Inspectorate.
The Inspectorate is equipped with new tools for combating corruption. Although
belong to the administration, its members may carry out preliminary investigations
for the public prosecutor. The purpose of the Inspectorate is to check the efficiency
and performance of government departments and scrutinize the activities of local
authorities. On the other hand it has no supervisory role powers over independent
administrative authorities, the judicial authorities, military/police authorities etc. Its
role is prevention and enforcement. It opens its investigations either at the Minister’s
request or on its own initiative. The Inspectorate does not make its checks public,
but commissions consider and where appropriate, take account of complaints by
members of the public and by the press against government departments. The
Inspectorate must draw up a report on any check it makes and send a copy to the
government department concerned.
Source: GRECO (Council of Europe) - Evaluation Report on Greece (2002) (edited)
5.2 Ethics
A Civil Servants’ Code of Ethics is in place. The code aims at safeguarding the civil
servants’ status and its constant upgrading by systematic observance of the
fundamental rules governing correct conduct, in the context of the legislation in force
and the everyday practices.
The generally accepted civil servants’ ethics code promotes their moral nature, the
quality of the services provided to the citizen as well as the public interest.
Source: The Greek Civil Servants' Code of Ethics
However, in 2002 the GRECO Evaluation Team expressed concern as to whether the
Public Servants Code, which contains anti-corruption standards as well as provisions
on public servants’ moral and ethical duties, was effectively applied.
Source: GRECO (Council of Europe) - Evaluation Report on Greece (2002)
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e-Participation
Index:
6.2 e-Participation e-Participation Index
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high quality informa-
0.4
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ource: United Nations – World Public Sector Report 2003 d
e-consultation:
The government website explains e-consultation mechanisms and tools. It offers a choice of public policy topics online for discussion with
real time and archived access to audios and videos of public meetings. The government encourages citizens to participate in discussions.
15
7. Links
Parliament http://www.parliament.gr/
Prime Minister http://www.primeminister.gr/
Ministries http://www.mfa.gr/english/greece/today/politics/government.html
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