ATHENS, Greece — Greek Finance Minister Kyriakos Pierrakakis was elected Thursday as president of the Eurogroup — a move that would have been unthinkable just 10 years ago when the country was in the throes of a deep financial crisis that almost saw it tossed out of the eurozone altogether.
The Eurogroup is the informal body of finance ministers from the 20 European Union members that use the euro as their shared currency. It gathers regularly to discuss and coordinate economic policies in the euro area countries, and as such, wields significant power in the shaping of each country's financial policy. The words of the Eurogroup president are closely followed.
''Today is a day of pride for the country, for the government and for all the citizens,'' Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said in a statement congratulating Pierrakakis. His election, Mitsotakis said, was ''the most emphatic recognition of our country's positive course ... exactly a decade since the country found itself on a cliff-edge, with closed banks and close to leaving the euro.''
Greece, ''the former ‘black sheep' of debt, now rises to the top of the financial council of the continent's most developed countries. And all this is thanks to the sacrifices of our compatriots,'' Mitsotakis said.
Pierrakakis, 42, is seen as a rising star in Greece's governing center-right New Democracy party. He took the post of finance minister in March after serving for about two years as education minister. Pierrakakis was credited with introducing sweeping reforms to slash bureaucracy and get many Greek public services online during his 2019-2023 tenure as minister of digital governance.
''It was I think 10 years ago that the debate here in Brussels was about whether or not Greece would be exiting the eurozone. And yet, Greece withstood,'' Pierrakakis said during a news conference in Brussels after his election was announced. ''And this is a testament I would say of many things. A testament of the collective strength of the people. It is a testament of European solidarity, of receiving help at the most dire of times.''
Pierrakakis said he will ''work to keep the Eurogroup a body of unity and shared purpose, focusing on our common currency, our common economic interests and the European project, grounded in the core values of the union.''
Greece's financial crisis