Europe made little
progress Wednesday in averting a new crisis that could force Greece to drop the
euro.
It wants to tear up
the existing international bailout program and win six months of bridge
financing to give it breathing space to negotiate a longer term solution.
Greek finance minister
Yanis Varoufakis met his eurozone peers as a group for the first time in
Brussels. He described the talks as "intensive and constructive."
Jeroen Dijsselbloem,
the Dutch finance minister who chaired the talks, said progress had been made
in understanding Greece's position. But there was no agreement on how to
advance the discussions, other than to meet again on Monday, he said.
Greece wants to roll
back 30% of the commitments it has made to the European states that have lent
it money. It wants to reduce its total debt burden, which at 175% of GDP is the
second highest in the world, raise the minimum wage and pensions, and reverse
some tax hikes.
The two sides were far
apart as the talks began, and little of substance appeared to have changed by
the time they ended. Europe says Greece must honor the terms of the existing
rescue loans, before it can talk about ways to ease the burden and boost
growth.
The impasse threatens
to cut off the lifeline keeping Greek banks afloat later this month, and could
ultimately force Greece to abandon the euro. Analysts say the chances of a
'Grexit' are higher than at any point since the second round of the Greek debt
crisis in 2012.
With other countries
such as Ireland, Portugal and Spain having worked through their own painful
bailout programs, Europe is in better shape than a few years ago to cope with
such a shock. And less inclined to give Greece much ground.
"For a number of
eurozone government[s] ...it's important that Syriza should fail and be seen to
fail," said Andrew Lilico, executive director of consultancy Europe
Economics.
Lilico said
endorsement of Syriza's policies was the last thing the Spanish government
would want to see because it would hand a huge political victory to a similar
opposition party in Spain.
Varoufakis said he
hoped agreement could be reached on Monday, but the search for a compromise
that is acceptable to Greece and to taxpayers in countries such as Germany and
France may take more time.
Europe needed to
recognize that Greeks had voted for change, while Greece had to understand that
commitments must be respected, said the European Commission's finance Chief
Pierre Moscovici.
"The [bailout]
program is our legal reference, it is on this basis -- inside this framework --
we can work," he said. Greece's biggest creditor, Germany, reinforced that
view. "We have this program, this program will be brought to an orderly
conclusion or we won't have a program," finance Minister Wolfgang
Schaeuble said bluntly.
Greek Prime Minister
Alexis Tsipras repeated Tuesday night that he would not ask for a formal
extension of the bailout, which is due to expire on February 28. Without an
extension, the European Central Bank could decide as early as next week to turn
off emergency financing for Greek banks.
(Πηγή: money.cnn.com)
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