Greece
secures third bailout after Germany backs down on opposition
Jean-Claude
Juncker claims Greece will ‘irreversibly’ remain part of the
eurozone, after vote by Greek MPs committed to radical economic and
fiscal reforms
Ian Traynor in
Brussels and Jon Henley in Athens
Friday 14 August
2015 23.20 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/aug/14/greece-edges-third-bailout-positive-signals-germany
Greece clinched a
three-year bailout worth €86bn (£60bn) after parliamentarians in
Athens backed the deal, and Germany backed down on its opposition to
the third rescue of the bankrupt country in five years.
A meeting of
eurozone finance ministers in Brussels representing the country’s
main creditors agreed to launch the new bailout with €26bn being
disbursed next week following six months of bitter recrimination that
almost saw the country, under the leftwing government of Alexis
Tsipras, becoming the first to exit the single currency.
The meeting was
upbeat about finalising the bailout terms after Tsipras, secured
approval from MPs for a huge package of legislation on Friday
morning. The vote committed the indebted country to radical economic
and fiscal reforms needed to secure the rescue money.
Wolfgang Schäuble,
the German finance minister and critic of the proposed new deal,
toned down his reservations at a meeting of his eurozone peers in
Brussels several hours after the Athens vote.
Over the past week,
Berlin has consistently argued against being rushed into a new
bailout, preferring to award Greece a new bridging loan to pay off a
debt payment of €3.2bn due to the European Central Bank next week.
But the temporary loans scenario was barely mentioned by finance
ministers.
“The past six
months have been difficult. We have looked into the abyss,” said
Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the European commission. “But
today the message of today’s Eurogroup is loud and clear: on this
basis, Greece is and will irreversibly remain a member of the Euro
area.”
In an abrupt change
of tone, the leaders paid tribute to Tsipras, who could only win the
vote on the new bailout with the support of the opposition and by
splitting his leftwing Syriza movement. It is now likely that Tsipras
will call early elections and trigger a realignment of Greek
politics.
Instead of
questioning the merits of the draft deal struck earlier this week
between Greece and its troika of creditors – the European
commission, European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund
– the main problems raised on Friday concerned the issue of debt
relief for Greece and whether or not the IMF would take part in the
rescue. The IMF is refusing to participate in a new bailout until
there is an “explicit and concrete agreement” on debt relief from
Greece’s eurozone creditors.
Christine Legarde,
the IMF managing director, told the meeting that it hoped to take
part in the bailout and that a decision would be made in October, but
she could not commit.
Schäuble said IMF
participation was “indispensable”.
Greece needs to pay
€3.7bn to its creditors next Thursday. The first €26bn will be
released on Thursday morning, eurozone leaders said, although Greece
would only see half of that immediately, since €10bn would be
reserved in Luxembourg for Greek bank recapitalisation while a
further €3bn would be disbursed over the next two months subject to
Athens delivering on its pledges.
The first of the
troika’s quarterly reviews of Greek progress in observing the
strict terms of the deal is to take place in October. Depending on
the results, the eurozone will then discuss rescheduling Greek debt
amid a new consensus among the IMF, the ECB and the commission that
the level of debt is unsustainable.
But Jeroen
Dijsselbloem, the Dutch finance minister, said Greece’s debt burden
– and the problems of servicing it – would not become a major
problem for almost 30 years.
There is unlikely to
be any direct writedown of nominal debt levels, but moves to reduce
the debt could involve extending repayment schedules and lowering
interest rates.
Germany is the
biggest and most formidable opponent of debt relief, but is also the
loudest supporter of keeping the IMF on board.
IMF involvement in
the new bailout was a “precondition” for Berlin, said Schäuble.
“We have to see that we can get a clear, possibly binding,
commitment from the IMF ... We’ve always said that has to be
feasible. The IMF has its own rules, but we will have to find a way.”
An IMF statement
supporting the new deal said it would reserve judgment on
participation until October. “The IMF will make an assessment of
its participation in providing any additional financing to Greece
once the steps on the authorities’ programme and debt relief have
been taken,” it said.
On Thursday the
IMF’s call for debt relief was bolstered further when the European
commission, the European Stability Mechanism – the eurozone’s
bailout fund – and the ECB raised concerns about the scale of the
debt burden. However, the three European institutions opposed the
idea of a so-called “haircut”, or reducing the size of the debt.
The IMF has said a haircut might be necessary.
Tsipras could become
the leader Greece needs – if he can survive politically
David Patrikarakos
Read more
Alexander Stubb, the
Finnish finance minister, admitted that the debt relief issue was a
problem that needed to be resolved.
“We should be
honest and open that there is a bit of a catch-22 to solve here,”
he said. “The IMF will be involved only with debt relief, and we
want the IMF to be involved but we don’t want debt relief. So some
kind of solution will have to be found.”
Speaking ahead of
the parliamentary vote in Athens, the Greek prime minister had urged
MPs to accept the tough bailout terms. Tsipras said the rescue
package was a necessary choice for the nation, saying it faced a
battle to avert the threat of a bridge loan – which he called a
return to “crisis without end” – that Greece may be offered
instead of a full-blown bailout.
The terms for the
bailout detail a radical overhaul of the Greek economy, stipulating
major reforms of health, welfare, pensions and taxation systems,
alongside more ambitious privatisation schemes. It also gives the
troika decisive influence over reforms of the country’s struggling
banking sector.
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