Greece presses case to change bailout terms
ATHENS |
(Reuters) - Greece's new government sought on Thursday to persuade
skeptical lenders visiting Athens to ease the punishing terms of the
bailout that is keeping the debt-laden country solvent but at the cost
of driving it deeper into recession.
Senior officials from Greece's
trio of international lenders met with conservative Prime Minister
Antonis Samaras and Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras for the first
time since Samaras's coalition government took power after a June
election.
The mission from the
"troika" - the European Union, European Central Bank and International
Monetary Fund - is in Athens to review Greece's faltering progress on
fiscal adjustment and reform under a 130 billion euro ($162.63 billion)
bailout deal.
Trying to take
advantage of a shift in Europe towards more growth-oriented economic
policy measures, Samaras wants to soften the conditions attached to the
bailout - withering tax hikes, job losses and wage cuts that have
deepened a recession now into its fifth year.
Setting
the tone, the fiery leader of the co-ruling PASOK Socialists, Evangelos
Venizelos, told party lawmakers: "Savage dismissals (of public sector
workers) can't happen and aren't necessary."
The
government faces huge public pressure following a re-run election on
June 17 that saw radical leftist bloc SYRIZA surge into second place on a
promise to tear up the bailout terms, raising the prospect of a
catastrophic Greek exit from Europe's single currency.
But the three-party coalition is running into stiff resistance from European partners, notably paymaster Germany, who say that while they are open to adjusting the program, they will not change its main tenets or targets.
Sworn
in on Wednesday morning by black robed priests, Stournaras, a liberal
economist who helped negotiate Greece's entry into the euro in 2001, was
first to meet the troika. The talks ended without statements. Samaras
was next up.
DEFAULT?
In Stockholm, Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg said on Swedish Radio on Thursday there was a major risk Greece would fail to fulfill its obligations to its lenders and end up in "some sort of default".
Greece
risks running out of cash within weeks if it fails to secure the next
31.5 billion-euro installment of bailout funds, Greek officials say.
The
troika mission chiefs are expected to leave at the end of the week
after meeting the new government but technical staff, who have already
started work, will remain to review Greece's compliance with the terms
of the bailout.
The mission chiefs
are expected to return later in July. Only then will lenders decide how
to adjust the program to take account of weeks of political paralysis
during two elections in May and June and a deeper than expected
recession.
The government says it
wants tax cuts, a freeze on public sector layoffs, extra help for the
poor and unemployed and an additional two years to cut its deficit.
If
implemented in full, that program would undo many austerity measures
the country agreed to earlier this year to clinch its second bailout
since 2010.
It is offering in exchange to expand and speed up the privatization process.
Prime
Minister Samaras will present his government's policy at the start of a
three-day parliamentary debate on Friday. A vote of confidence on the
coalition is scheduled to take place late on Sunday.
The
head of the EU taskforce helping to rebuild the country's economy
called on the government to urgently pay out a backlog of
value-added-tax reimbursements owed to exporters to ease the financing
crunch faced by Greek businesses.
The state owed exporters about 450 million euros in reimbursements since 2009, Horst Reichenbach told a conference in Athens.
"This
backlog clearly should be cleared as soon as possible in view of the
very difficult financial situation in which many of the exporters find
themselves," he said.
(Additional reporting by Deepa Babington, Tatiana Fragou and Harry Papachristou; Writing by Matt Robinson; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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