This quarter’s bulletin delivers exclusive polling, proprietary socioeconomic indicators and in‑depth political and economic analysis. Combined, they offer a uniquely sharp reading of where Greece stands, and where it’s heading.
A few standout insights from this edition:
· Households under pressure despite macro resilience
The Economic Sentiment Index inches up to 4.3/10, but personal finances drop to 3.6/10.
75% of Greeks name cost of living as their top concern — a signal that macro stability isn’t translating into lived security.
· Trust in institutions remains at rock bottom levels
The Political Landscape Index holds at 3.7/10, trust in political institutions at 3.8/10, and the Social Climate Index at 3.2/10.
Parliament, Justice, the media and NGOs remain stuck in the 2–3/10 range.
· A public wary of over‑alignment in foreign policy
Only 12.5% want Greece to align more closely with the US in the Middle East crisis.
Majorities favour strengthening ties with China (58%) and Russia (53.5%), while just 32% support deepening ties with the US.
The public's instinct favours balanced diplomacy over hard alignment.
· A cold, fragmented electoral landscape
New Democracy leads the “certain” voter pool at 19%, but rejection rates across all parties remain extremely high:
72% say they are unlikely to vote ND, 79% PASOK, 87% SYRIZA.
The field remains wide open as fragmentation deepens.
· Accountability pressures intensify after OPEKEPE
73% want the European Public Prosecutor’s Office to actively intervene in cases of mismanagement of EU funds.
Responsibility for the scandal is assigned overwhelmingly to management (85%) and the government (82%).
Alongside the data, this edition offers deep dives into:
• Greece’s elevated role in the Middle East crisis
• the political fallout from Predator and OPEKEPE
• the emerging space for new political actors
• the economic implications of the energy shock and revised growth outlook
With elections approaching in late 2026 or early 2027, this quarter’s findings capture a Greece with solid macro foundations but a fragile political and social order, and a government under mounting pressure to regain trust.