The survey showed that households were pessimistic about their future finances, negatively affected by price increases, with 56.7% of respondents saying they had to cut spending on basic needs (very), another 28.4% said they cut spending (a little), and 14.8% responded negatively.
GSEVEE said government measures to address the impact of price increases on household incomes were seemingly insufficient. 51.9% of households expect their finances to deteriorate in 2023, a trend recorded for the first time since 2018.
Beyond the impact of the high inflation rate, Greek households cited the deteriorating adequacy of their incomes as another negative factor. More specifically, 52.4% of respondents said their monthly payment covered 18 days (on average), a development related to price increases in electricity and food.
More than 60% of households said a government measure to freeze prices on a basket of consumer goods has not helped push prices down, and 51.1% said the most efficient measure was wage and pension increases.
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