EU rejects Greek request for new loans
By Florian Elder
The move makes it all but certain that Athens will default on a €1.6 billion loan at midnight Tuesday.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras requested the aid earlier Tuesday in a letter obtained by POLITICO, hoping to win an 11th-hour reprieve. In addition to fresh loans, he asked for some of Greece’s debt to be forgiven.
The Eurogroup of finance ministers considered the request during a 90-minute conference call Tuesday night. The group expect another proposal from Athens by Wednesday morning, Estonian finance minister Sven Sester said in a tweet.
Eurogroup head Jeroen Dijsselbloem offered a withering appraisal of Tsipras’ offer on CNN soon after the call ended.
“The political circumstances and political stunts of the Greek government don’t seem to have changed,” he said. “The practical circumstance is that the old program expires” at midnight.
The rejection makes it all but certain that Greece will default on a €1.6 billion loan repayment to the International Monetary Fund due by midnight Tuesday. A default sets a series of levers in motion that is likely to result in Greece leaving the euro.
The default will put immediate pressure on the European Central Bank to reconsider its support for Greek banks.
Unless Greece can secure new funds in the coming weeks, the ECB will have no choice but to cut off its liquidity support for the banks, which would trigger their collapse. The ECB has already limited its support for the banks, a decision that forced Athens to close banks until next week to forestall a run on deposits.
Greece’s bailout also expires at midnight, meaning it will lose access to the remaining funds and would have to negotiate a new rescue if it wants to remain in the euro. But the prospects of such an outcome are dim because Athens would have to agree to accept the same deep budget cuts it has so far rejected in order to secure a deal.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel opposed reopening talks with Greece, according to a source present at a meeting she attended Tuesday afternoon of her CDU/CSU group in the German Bundestag.
When she was told of the Tsipras proposal, the German leader checked in with her Social Democrat governing coalition partner about the offer, the source told POLITICO. She then told her parliamentary group that the government wouldn’t enter into talks with Athens before Greece holds a referendum on July 5 whether to accept the creditors’ economic reform conditions for fresh bailout funds.
What Tsipras asked for would amount to a third bailout, giving it enough money to make debt repayments through 2017. It owes creditors about €30 billion euros during that period. The country has already received two bailouts totaling more than €240 billion.
In the letter, the Greek leader asks the eurozone to invoke bylaws of its bailout fund that allow for the disbursement of money to a member “if indispensable to safeguard the stability of the euro area as a whole.”
On top of a two-year loan, Tsipras asked the Eurogroup to extend the country’s current bailout program, which also expires at midnight Tuesday, “for a short period of time in order to ensure a technical default is not triggered.” Such a step would normally require parliamentary approval in some states — an impossibility given the tight timeline.
“This is a move to blame the EU institutions for not being cooperative and make people vote ‘no’ Sunday because there is now a ‘better’ deal to be had,” this person said. “They want something for nothing — there is nothing in the letter on Greece’s obligations to reform.”
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home