European Central Bank
president Mario Draghi has defended the ECB’s role in the current Greek crisis,
rebutting accusations that the bank had “blackmailed” Greece.
“The ECB has €104 billion of exposure to
Greece. This is equal to 65 per cent of Greek GDP, which is the highest
exposure in the euro zone . . . so what sort of blackmail is this? We haven’t
created any rule for Greece, rules were in place and they’ve been applied,” he
said during the exchange.
During his appearance before the European
Parliament’s economic and financial affairs committee in Brussels yesterday, Mr
Draghi expressed confidence that discussions between Greece and its
international partners would lead to a “successful conclusion” of the current
review programme.
Debt obligations
However, he warned
that Greece had to “fully honour its debt obligations”. He said the financial
situation of Greece under the last government “was not the fault of the troika,
not the fault of the ECB”. The contagion risk posed was also much lower than
during the last crisis, he said, although he stressed that he was only speaking
of the short term.
While Mr Draghi repeated his belief that
Greece would at some point in the future be in a position to partake in the
ECB’s quantitative easing programme, launched last month, he said it still had
to fulfil several conditions.
Waiver
“There will be a time
when will we be able to reinstate the waiver, we’ll be able to do QE to Greece,
but several conditions have to be satisfied and they are not there yet.”
However, he said he was confident that the conditions would be satisfied.
The Greek banking system was also discussed
during the hearing with MEPs. While raising concerns about the liquidity of the
banks, the ECB chief said the banking system was not facing a solvency crisis.
“Greek banks are this time in a much better state than they were on the
occasion of the last crisis.”
Mr Draghi said Greek banks were compliant
with a number of “minimum regulatory requirements. . . At the same time the
liquidity situation . . . has been deteriorating and therefore the banks’
dependence on ECB funding has increased.”
The ECB has been propping up Greek banks
with emergency funding known as emergency liquidity assistance. The ECB is
believed to have increased the maximum amount of emergency liquidity it
provides to the Greek banking system by €400 million last week.
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