Greece
debt crisis: Athens accepts harsh austerity as bailout deal nears
Greek
cabinet backs a 13-page package of reforms and spending cuts worth
€13bn to secure third bailout and modest debt writeoff
Phillip
Inman, Graeme Wearden and Helena Smith in Athens
Thursday
9 July 2015 19.39 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jul/09/greece-debt-crisis-athens-accepts-harsh-austerity-as-bailout-deal-nears
The Greek government
capitulated on Thursday to demands from its creditors for severe
austerity measures in return for a modest debt write-off, raising
hopes that a rescue deal could be signed at an emergency meeting of
EU leaders on Sunday.
Athens has put
forward a 13-page document detailing reforms and public spending cuts
worth €13bn with the aim of securing a third bailout from creditors
that would raise €53.5bn and allow it to stay inside the currency
union.
A cabinet meeting
signed off the reform package after ministers agreed that the dire
state of the economy and the debilitating closure of the country’s
banks meant it had no option but to agree to almost all the creditors
terms.
Parliament is
expected to endorse the package after a frantic few days of
negotiation that followed a landmark referendum last Sunday in which
Greek voters backed the radical leftist Syriza government’s call
for debt relief.
Syriza, which is in
coalition with the rightwing populist Independent party, is expected
to meet huge opposition from within its own ranks and from trade
unions and youth groups that viewed the referendum as a vote against
any austerity.
Panagiotis
Lafazanis, the energy minister and influential hard-leftist, who on
Wednesday welcomed a deal for a new €2bn gas pipeline from Russia,
has ruled out a new tough austerity package.
Lafazanis represents
around 70 Syriza MPs who have previously taken a hard line against
further austerity measures and could yet wreck any top-level
agreement.
Emphasising the
likelihood of further strife in Greece next week even should a deal
be concluded, Brussels officials talked privately of plans to fly in
humanitarian aid such as food parcels and medicines to major cities.
The urgency of Greek
efforts to prevent an exit from the euro came after Brussels set a
midnight Thursday deadline for Greece to produce a package of
measures in line with previous demands.
The new proposals
include sweeping reforms to VAT to raise 1% of GDP and moving more
items to the 23% top rate of tax, including restaurants – a key
battleground before.
Greece has also
dropped its opposition to abolishing the lower VAT rate on its
islands, starting with the most popular tourist attractions. Athens
also appears to have made significant concessions on pensions,
agreeing to phase out solidarity payments for the poorest pensioners
by December 2019, a year earlier than planned. It would also raise
the retirement age to 67 by 2022.
And it has agreed to
raise corporation tax to 28%, as the IMF wanted, not 29%, as
previously targeted.
Greece is also
proposing to cut military spending by €100m in 2015 and by €200m
in 2016, and implement changes to reform and improve tax collection
and fight tax evasion. It will also press on with privatisation of
state assets including regional airports and ports. Some government
MPs had vowed to reverse this.
In return, Greece
appears to be seeking a three-year loan deal worth €53.5bn.
The Greek government
said parliament would vote on the proposals later today, before an
emergency summit on Sunday of all 28 European Union leaders.
Several EU leaders
said the troika of creditors – the European commission, the
International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank - must also
make concessions to secure Greece’s future inside the eurozone.
Donald Tusk, who
chairs the EU summits, said European officials would make an effort
to address Greece’s key request for a debt write-off.
“The realistic
proposal from Greece will have to be matched by an equally realistic
proposal on debt sustainability from the creditors. Only then will we
have a win-win situation,” Tusk said.
Tusk, a former prime
minister of Poland, aligned himself with France and Italy in seeking
a way through the political maze that has defeated all previous
efforts to find a breakthrough.
Sources close to
Greece’s chief negotiator and finance minister, Euclid Tsakalotos,
said he had finalised and submitted a plan of reforms for a third
bailout to give creditors time to review it ahead of a summit of EU
members on Sunday.
On Thursday, the
German finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble said the possibility of
some kind of debt relief would be discussed over coming days,
although he cautioned it may not provide much help.
“The room for
manoeuvre through debt reprofiling or restructuring is very small,”
he said.
Greece has long
argued its debt is too high to be paid back and that the country
requires some form of debt relief. The IMF agrees, but key European
states such as Germany have resisted the idea.
Making Greece’s
debt more sustainable would likely involve lowering the interest
rates and extending the repayment dates on its bailout loans. Germany
and many other European countries rule out an outright debt cut,
arguing it would be illegal under European treaties.
The developments on
Thursday boosted market confidence that a compromise will be found.
The Stoxx 50 index of top European shares was up 2.4% in late
afternoon trading.
Prime minister
Alexis Tsipras met with finance ministry officials ahead of the
cabinet meeting on Thursday afternoon which finalised his country’s
plan, a day after his government requested a new three-year aid
programme from Europe’s bailout fund and promised to immediately
enact reforms.
The last-minute
negotiations come as Greece’s financial system teeters on the brink
of collapse. It has imposed restrictions on banking transactions
since 29 June, limiting cash withdrawals to €60 per day to staunch
a bank run. Banks and the stock market have been shut for just as
long.
The closures, which
have been extended until Monday, have led to daily lines at cash
machines and have hammered businesses. Payments abroad have been
banned without special permission.
Greece’s financial
institutions have been kept afloat so far by emergency liquidity
assistance from the ECB. But the central bank has not increased the
amount in days, giving the lenders a stranglehold despite capital
controls.
German ECB governing
council member Jens Weidmann argued Greek banks should not get more
emergency credit from the central bank unless a bailout deal is
struck.
He said it was up to
eurozone governments and Greek leaders themselves to rescue Greece.
The central bank
“has no mandate to safeguard the solvency of banks and
governments,” he said in a speech.
The ECB capped
emergency credit to Greek banks amid doubt over whether the country
will win further rescue loans from other countries. The banks closed
and limited cash withdrawals because they had no other way to replace
deposits.
Weidmann said he
welcomed the fact that central bank credit “is no longer being used
to finance capital flight caused by the Greek government”.
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