Greece
moves closer to eurozone exit after delaying €300m repayment to IMF
Athens
takes creditor by surprise, saying it will bundle together €1.6bn
of debt payments due to International Monetary Fund and settle up on
30 June
Yanis Varoufakis and
Alexis Tsipras arrive at the finance ministry in Athens
The decision to
delay payments appears to be a show of defiance at what Greece’s
Alexis Tsipras and Yanis Varoufakis see as unacceptably harsh terms
being demanded by its creditors. Photograph: Pantelis Saitas/EPA
Larry Elliott,
Heather Stewart and Helena Smith in Athens
Thursday 4 June 2015
20.18 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jun/04/greece-delays-300m-payment-to-imf
Greece has moved
closer to default and possible exit from the eurozone after telling
the International Monetary Fund it would not be making a debt
repayment of €300m (£219m) due on Friday.
A crisis that has
been going on for more than five years entered a new phase when
Athens surprised the IMF by saying it intended to bundle up four
payments in June totalling €1.6bn and make them all at the end of
the month.
The move came as the
Greek government reacted angrily to what was seen as an ultimatum
from its creditors – including the IMF – that demanded further
austerity and unpopular reforms to VAT, pensions and wage bargaining
as the price for €7.2bn in fresh financial help.
Although Greece’s
financial position has become increasingly serious in recent months,
Athens had the ability to make the €300m payment and the country’s
prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, gave the IMF managing director,
Christine Lagarde, an assurance earlier this week it would be made on
time.
Asked about the
repayment due on Friday, Lagarde told reporters: “The payment had
been honoured and will be honoured. I think his words were, ‘Do not
worry.’ I’m confident that will continue to be the case.”
Instead, the
decision to delay payments appears to be a show of defiance by Athens
against what it sees as unacceptably harsh terms being demanded by
its creditors. This increases the chances of Greece defaulting on its
debts, losing the support for its weak financial sector from the
European Central Bank, and eventually being forced to leave the
single currency.
Fresh from talks in
Brussels, Tsipras faced outrage on Thursday from highly sceptical
members of his own Syriza party. A five-page ultimatum from
creditors, presented by the European commission president,
Jean-Claude Juncker, was variously described as shocking,
provocative, disgraceful and dishonourable.
“It will never
pass,” said Greece’s deputy social security minister, Dimitris
Stratoulis. “If they don’t back down, the country won’t be lost
… there are alternatives that would cost less than our signing a
disgraceful and dishonourable agreement.”
Tsipras had
presented the so-called troika of lenders – the EU, the ECB and IMF
– with his own 47-page list of proposed reforms, but must now
decide to accede to creditors’ demands or take on hardliners in his
own party. Actions being asked of Greece include spending cuts and
tax increases worth 2% of the country’s GDP in the form of pension
and VAT reform – anathema to a party catapulted into office on the
promise of terminating austerity.
On Thursday night
Tsipras was seen to be leaning on the side of rejection. Officials
described him as telling associates: “Such extremist proposals
cannot be accepted by the Greek government. Everyone must understand
that the Greek people have greatly suffered over the last five years
and some have to stop playing games at their expense.” There was
also speculation that he will call a general election over the debt
impasse.
News that Greece
would not be making its scheduled IMF payment on time came after the
close of European markets, but shares fell sharply on Wall Street.
The IMF issued a
short statement in which it confirmed Greece’s plan to bundle up
its June payments but stressed that the rules that permitted the move
were supposed to be for countries facing administrative problems.
“Under an
executive board decision adopted in the late 1970s, country members
can ask to bundle together multiple principal payments falling due in
a calendar month (payments of interest cannot be included in the
bundle). The decision was intended to address the administrative
difficulty of making multiple payments in a short period,” said IMF
spokesman Gerry Rice.
Greece’s finance
minister, Yanis Varoufakis, told Sky News: “Objectively speaking,
we have until the 30 June because this is when the extension of the
agreement with our creditors expires.”
But he conceded that
Greece would be unable to continue making repayments at some point.
In Brussels,
officials said Athens had 10 days to strike a deal. Technical teams
of negotiators from the EC, the ECB and IMF hope to wrap up what is
known as a “staff level agreement” by 14 June, four days before
the next scheduled session of eurozone finance ministers and 11 days
before a Brussels summit of EU leaders on 25 June.
Both Juncker and
Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who heads the euro group of eurozone finance
ministers, insisted that not enough progress had been made in the
talks so far. The European commission chief said he would ask Tsipras
back to Brussels for more negotiations in the next few days.
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