Greece and its
international lenders have embarked on a battle over the country’s staggering
debt. The New Greek government, led by left-wing party Syriza, wants the debt
reduced and its terms renegotiated; its creditors are reluctant to forgive any
debt, but may be prepared to talk about extending the deadlines for repayment.
About 246 billion
euros was lent by other countries in the eurozone, the European Central Bank
and the International Monetary Fund - otherwise known as the Troika - to
prevent Greece collapsing and crashing out of the euro.
Syriza won the
election after portraying the Troika as the enemy because of the tough
austerity program it imposed on Greece in exchange for its money.
So who stands to lose most?
Eurozone: Most Greek debt is
held by other eurozone countries. Around 53 billion euros was loaned through
bilateral agreements, according to researchers at Open Europe. The Greek
government would have to renegotiate these with each country individually. Some
like France might be more willing to talk; others such as Finland have already
said no.
A far bigger chunk,
142 billion euros, came from the Eurozone’s bailout fund. Any relief on those
loans would have to be agreed by all members. All eurozone countries chipped
into the fund but by far the largest contribution - 27% - came from Germany,
and it will exert huge influence in negotiations with Greece.
The German government
has so far rejected talk of a haircut, which would mean losses for its
taxpayers. Germany’s exposure to the bailouts totals 56 billion euros -
equivalent to roughly 700 euros per citizen.
ECB: Greece owes the ECB
about 27 billion euros. The bank has already said it cannot offer any relief -
simply because it would be illegal. The clock is ticking on the ECB debt, with
6.7 billion euros due by August.
IMF: The IMF holds 28
billion euros of Greek debt. It’s very unlikely that it would agree to any kind
of relief program. That’s just not how the IMF plays its game. Even countries
that defaulted on their IMF debt in the past, such as Argentina, ended up
paying the IMF in full.
Greece has to repay
part of the IMF loan by March. A rollover might be possible, but IMF chief
Christine Lagarde said Greece cannot expect any special treatment.
(Πηγή: gantdaily.com)