(Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp. has agreed to build a series of new data centers in Greece, in a move the Greek government says will boost entrepreneurship and encourage other major companies to invest in the country.The “ongoing” investment will be the biggest by the U.S. technology giant in its 28 years of operations in Greece, Microsoft President Brad Smith said at a deal presentation in Athens Monday. The decision “shows confidence in the Greek economy, the Greek people and the government,” Smith said. “It’s not something we do in every country.”Microsoft will also start a training program to help fill around 100,000 jobs the initiative will create, Smith said.The new data centers “automatically upgrade the country as an investment destination,” Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said at the presentation, calling the move a vote of confidence in the country’s potential. Analysts estimate that over time the investment will have an economic benefit worth around $1 billion, he said.Mitsotakis and Smith first discussed a Microsoft investment in Greece during a meeting at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland earlier this year.Shrinking EconomyGreece is grappling with an economy that shrank some 25% during the decade-long sovereign debt crisis and which the government expects to lose a further 8.2% this year due to the virus pandemic.Though unemployment is predicted to fall to 18.6% in 2020 from the crisis peak of nearly 30%, according to the government’s draft budget submitted Monday, it remains the highest in Europe. The International Monetary Fund forecasts that joblessness will surge back to around 20% this year.The government also estimates that the economy will expand 7.5% in 2021, mainly due to a forecast 30.4% increase in investments. Public debt, which had been declining before the onset of the pandemic, is now expected at close to 200% for 2020.With the agreement announced Monday, Greece will become the first country in southeastern Europe to host a Microsoft data centers.The company is already working on an artificial intelligence project for the ancient city of Olympia, scheduled to be ready early next year, and it acquired a Greek start-up earlier this year.“We have the sun, now we also have the Cloud,” Alex Patelis, Mitsotakis’s chief economic adviser, told Bloomberg. “Digital nomads, tech companies, asset managers: Greece is calling.”(Updates with budget forecasts from 6th paragraph.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.,
(Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp. has agreed to build a series of new data centers in Greece, in a move the Greek government says will boost entrepreneurship and encourage other major companies to invest in the country.The “ongoing” investment will be the biggest by the U.S. technology giant in its 28 years of operations in Greece, Microsoft President Brad Smith said at a deal presentation in Athens Monday. The decision “shows confidence in the Greek economy, the Greek people and the government,” Smith said. “It’s not something we do in every country.”Microsoft will also start a training program to help fill around 100,000 jobs the initiative will create, Smith said.The new data centers “automatically upgrade the country as an investment destination,” Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said at the presentation, calling the move a vote of confidence in the country’s potential. Analysts estimate that over time the investment will have an economic benefit worth around $1 billion, he said.Mitsotakis and Smith first discussed a Microsoft investment in Greece during a meeting at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland earlier this year.Shrinking EconomyGreece is grappling with an economy that shrank some 25% during the decade-long sovereign debt crisis and which the government expects to lose a further 8.2% this year due to the virus pandemic.Though unemployment is predicted to fall to 18.6% in 2020 from the crisis peak of nearly 30%, according to the government’s draft budget submitted Monday, it remains the highest in Europe. The International Monetary Fund forecasts that joblessness will surge back to around 20% this year.The government also estimates that the economy will expand 7.5% in 2021, mainly due to a forecast 30.4% increase in investments. Public debt, which had been declining before the onset of the pandemic, is now expected at close to 200% for 2020.With the agreement announced Monday, Greece will become the first country in southeastern Europe to host a Microsoft data centers.The company is already working on an artificial intelligence project for the ancient city of Olympia, scheduled to be ready early next year, and it acquired a Greek start-up earlier this year.“We have the sun, now we also have the Cloud,” Alex Patelis, Mitsotakis’s chief economic adviser, told Bloomberg. “Digital nomads, tech companies, asset managers: Greece is calling.”(Updates with budget forecasts from 6th paragraph.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.
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