Greece's finance minister has told the International
Monetary Fund chief that his country will repay a substantial loan from the
organisation that is due this week.
Greece is in difficult negotiations with creditors
over its bailout programme, which has delayed the disbursement of the final 7.2
billion euro ($7.9 billion) aid tranche. That has led to a cash crunch, forcing
the government to tap reserves.
Athens has been hoping for at least a partial release
of the final bailout installment in order to avoid default and to pay salaries
and pensions.
"We both agreed that effective cooperation is in
everyone's interest," Lagarde said in the statement. "We noted that
continuing uncertainty is not in Greece's interest."
Greece must repay a 450 million euro IMF loan
installment on Thursday. Deputy finance minister Dimitris Mardas on Saturday
told TV station Mega that Greece has the funds but it is up to the government
to decide whether to pay.
Greece and its creditors have been negotiating which
reforms it should enact to its economy to receive more funding.
Since 2010, Greece has been dependent on rescue loans
worth 240 billion euros from other eurozone countries and the IMF.
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras was elected in January
on promises to abolish the deeply resented bailout conditions, which included
deep spending cuts and tax hikes. However, the new Syriza government has since
softened many pre-election promises.
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