The Greek
government is running out of time and money. If it fails to come to a deal with
eurozone partners on 24 April, there is a real chance it could default on its
loans. That could push the Greek government towards leaving the single
currency.
Is Greece about to default?
It feels as
if we have been here before, but there is a growing belief that without a deal
on Greek reforms, the left-led Syriza government will run out of cash.
Debt
interest payments are piling up. It has to pay off an €80m interest bill to the
European Central Bank (ECB) on 20 April and €200m to the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) on 1 May.
But the one
that is stirring jitters around Europe is a €760m (£550m; $810m) interest
payment to the IMF that is due on 12 May.
Greece is
faced with a difficult choice: either pay up its debts or continue to fund
pensions and public sector salaries. Already there are reports that the Athens
government has made a vain plea to delay its debt repayments to the IMF.
Can it stay afloat?
It is
barely managing, denying reports that it has used reserves from the health
service to help pay off its debts, despite meeting its April payment to the IMF
of €448m.
For a
populist, left-wing party like Syriza, swept to power on a wave of anger at austerity,
it will be difficult to stop paying pensions and the decision appears
inevitable. Greece has already been rescued by two EU/IMF bailouts to the tune
of €240bn since 2010.
The aim of
the 24 April talks is to unlock a €7.2bn bailout tranche. Even then it might
still need a third bailout worth tens of billions. But if Greece's reform
package fails to satisfy its creditors, there will be no new cash.
What if it does default?
Greek banks
are already on life support. They are relying on €74bn in emergency liquidity
assistance (ELA) from the European Central Bank.
If the
government defaults on its loans, it risks cutting off its liquidity from the
ECB, which is keeping both the banks and the government afloat. A "forced
default" would create a downward spiral.
Tens of
billions of euros have already been withdrawn from private and business
accounts and deposits could leave even faster. To halt a run on the banks there
might be a ban on withdrawals.
How serious for us is the Greek tragedy?
Does that mean Grexit?
Greece's
future in the euro is looking so shaky that UK bookmaker William Hill has
stopped taking bets on the chances of a Grexit. And a forced default, seen as
the worst possible option, could plunge Greece out of the euro.
"A
forced default is where the coffers are empty, you stop paying employees and
say, 'We're using all our resources to pay the hospital bills'," says Prof
Iain Begg of the London School of Economics.
Greece
would return to the drachma, suffer instant devaluation and inflation and there
would be a banking crisis.
It could
end up a pariah in the international markets for years, much like Argentina in
2002, warns Prof Begg. Greeks want to stay in the single currency, but a forced
default would likely push them out.
Could Greece find help in Russia?
Is Grexit inevitable?
There could
be a deal on 24 April that keeps the euros rolling in and maintains the
eurozone's lifeline to Athens.
It seems
unlikely although, to many observers, both sides appear to be calling each
other's bluff - a high-stakes game of poker.
However,
even failure to find a deal would not necessarily mean forced default or
Grexit. Nor would missing its next debt payments.
For some
economists, potentially the best option would be for Greece to pursue a
"managed default". That could mean more relaxed and longer terms on
servicing the debt on its eurozone loans.
But it
could also mean Greece remaining in the eurozone with strict capital controls
to stop money from flooding out of Greece.
One idea,
reportedly under consideration in Germany, would be for the ECB to continue
funding Greek banks while considering them in default, in return for strict
guarantees for structural reform.
(Πηγή:
bbc.com)
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