



After months of denials, Greek Prime Minister George Papaconstantinou admitted the country may be forced to sell the some of its property. That means that the unfathomable may be possible: could the Acropolis soon be on the auction block, sold to the highest bidder?

Though the wonder of the Ancient World may escape this fate, lesser-known state assets may have to be sold as Greece looks to dig itself out of its financial hole. Up until now, the premier did not want to face voter ire if possible. It is enough that citizens will suffer the results of austerity that cut some of their salaries and raised their taxes.

The promise that the government would hold on to public assets was always at risk. The Greek economy continues to shrink. Credit ratings agencies and capital markets investors have begun to signal that the southern European nation may default on its obligations in 2013, when the principle on some of its debt comes due. The EU and IMF bailout of Greece will cost about $150 billion over three years. That does not appear to be enough to offset the damage of a stagnant economy.



So far the Greeks have only taken half measures with their real estate. According to Bloomberg, the government has tried to lease land to developers rather than to sell it outright. Greece could change the terms of those leases eventually as any sovereign nation can.