Greece's main consumer group has claimed massive support for a boycott of shops on Tuesday, as part of continuing protests over price rises caused by the introduction of the euro.
"On Tuesday we are not buying anything. No food, no clothes, no fuel. Absolutely nothing," the Institute of Consumer Protection (Inka) said in a statement.
According to Inka, retail trade has dropped by some 85% in the early morning, and opinion polls predict nationwide participation of up to 75% of consumers.
The boycott, which extends even to switching off electrical goods and abstaining from telephone calls, has the indirect backing of the socialist government, which has previously accused unscrupulous retailers of fiddling.
Greece is the latest in a string of eurozone countries - including Italy, the Netherlands and most prominently Germany - to have experienced consumer unrest over the transition to euro cash.
Dodgy dealing
Campaigners claim that the switchover to the euro allowed merchants to raise prices by stealth.
In Greece, for example, goods that previously cost 300 drachma could be repriced at 1 euro - which equates to 340.75 drachma - without most customers noticing the difference.
Indeed, Inka claims that the average price rise has been 10% so far this year.
European authorities, meanwhile, have stuck to their line that the changeover caused only negligible changes in overall prices, since roundings-up could be balanced by roundings-down.
Ministry measures
The Greek government, too, has acknowledged the problem.
"I believe a message must be sent throughout the market that inflated prices and deceiving consumers because of the new currency will not be tolerated," Finance Minister Nikos Christodoulakis said.
Mr Christodoulakis is working on a blacklist of businesses involved in unethical pricing, and last month called in major tourist operators to warn them against raising their prices.
Aside from the political implications, the ministry is concerned about Greece's headline rate of inflation, at 3.3% already among the highest in the eurozone.
The country's participation in the euro - which it joined late, in 2001 - could be imperilled by any economic indiscipline.
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/2233056.stm
what about other EU countries? Notice the difference? Got angry?
"On Tuesday we are not buying anything. No food, no clothes, no fuel. Absolutely nothing," the Institute of Consumer Protection (Inka) said in a statement.
According to Inka, retail trade has dropped by some 85% in the early morning, and opinion polls predict nationwide participation of up to 75% of consumers.
The boycott, which extends even to switching off electrical goods and abstaining from telephone calls, has the indirect backing of the socialist government, which has previously accused unscrupulous retailers of fiddling.
Greece is the latest in a string of eurozone countries - including Italy, the Netherlands and most prominently Germany - to have experienced consumer unrest over the transition to euro cash.
Dodgy dealing
Campaigners claim that the switchover to the euro allowed merchants to raise prices by stealth.
In Greece, for example, goods that previously cost 300 drachma could be repriced at 1 euro - which equates to 340.75 drachma - without most customers noticing the difference.
Indeed, Inka claims that the average price rise has been 10% so far this year.
European authorities, meanwhile, have stuck to their line that the changeover caused only negligible changes in overall prices, since roundings-up could be balanced by roundings-down.
Ministry measures
The Greek government, too, has acknowledged the problem.
"I believe a message must be sent throughout the market that inflated prices and deceiving consumers because of the new currency will not be tolerated," Finance Minister Nikos Christodoulakis said.
Mr Christodoulakis is working on a blacklist of businesses involved in unethical pricing, and last month called in major tourist operators to warn them against raising their prices.
Aside from the political implications, the ministry is concerned about Greece's headline rate of inflation, at 3.3% already among the highest in the eurozone.
The country's participation in the euro - which it joined late, in 2001 - could be imperilled by any economic indiscipline.
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/2233056.stm
what about other EU countries? Notice the difference? Got angry?
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