The ECB
head Mario Draghi has said a failure to resolve the Greece crisis may take the
situation into "uncharted waters." International lenders are pressing
Athens to present a more detailed plan for spending.
"More
work, much more work is needed now, and it's urgent," Draghi said at the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) - World Bank spring meeting in Washington.
The ECB
head said he didn't even want to "contemplate" Greece defaulting on
its debt, which could result in the world economy being pushed into
"uncharted territory."
Admitting
that Athens' leaders were "free to choose what they can do," Draghi
said that an overall framework was necessary to assess the fiscal impact of
Greece's proposals. He insisted that "we all want Greece to succeed. The
answer lies in the hands of the Greek government."
IMF head
Christine Lagarde also said that she had met Greece's Finance Minister Yanis
Varoufakis over the past two days and demanded that the country needed to say
how much it could deliver "in terms of fiscal revenues or spending."
Meanwhile,
Greek representatives were in Paris trying to reach an agreement which would
secure payments the country has to make in the form of salaries and debts to
the IMF. Greece needed to generate somewhere between $10-11 billion (9-10
billion euros) to service its debts, international lenders estimated.
The country
is negotiating terms with the IMF, World Bank and the ECB to receive the final
7.2 billion-euro installment of its 240-billion-euro bailout deal. Eurozone
countries are demanding that Athens produce a list of reforms that prove its
credibility before releasing the money.
There are
also reports of Athens being in talks with Russia over a gas pipeline deal that
could bring nearly five billion dollars to the financially ravaged country.
(Πηγή:
www.dw.de)
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