Greece’s
creditors have put the finishing touches to a take-it-or-leave-it deal that
will be submitted to the Athens government today.
“We have
submitted a realistic plan for Greece to exit the crisis – a realistic plan,
whose acceptance by the institutions, our lenders and our partners in Europe
will mark the end of … divisions in Europe,” Mr Tsipras said. “It is now clear
that the decision on whether they want to adjust to realism… rests with the
political leadership of Europe”.
Despite the
creditors’ plan – put together with input from the head of the International
Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank this week – there are no guarantees
Greece will sign up. “As long as it doesn’t meet [our] economic conditions we
can’t come to an agreement,” Mr Tsipras said.
Some have
suggested Mr Tsipras may need to put the plan to the Greek population in a
national referendum.
His
government is fast running out of money and is due to repay €300m (£220m) to
the IMF on Friday – plus a further €1.3bn by the end of the month. Athens needs
to do a deal with its IMF and eurozone creditors to unlock a €7.2bn bailout
payment it needs to meet its imminent liabilities and retain access for its
banks to emergency funding from the European Central Bank. Without that funding
Greece could default and crash out of the eurozone.
Talks have
foundered on questions of pension and labour market reforms, with Athens
arguing its anti-austerity election mandate in January ruled out the measures
being pushed by its creditors.
Another
stumbling bloc is the primary budget surplus targets that will be demanded of
Greece. Reports suggested the text of the agreement could require a primary
surplus of about 1 per cent of GDP this year, lower than the 3 per cent
originally required in the current bailout programme but still requiring
further austerity.
Jeroen
Dijsselbloem, head of the Eurogroup of eurozone finance ministers, said there
are signs Greece wants a deal, but he added that it will need to tell its
voters that it will not be able to meet all its election promises.
Greek
two-year interest rates eased 183 basis points to 23 per cent on the reports of
a draft plan. Elsewhere markets were also upbeat. German 10-year bund yields
spiked 17 basis points to 0.71 per cent, the biggest one day move since August
2012, triggered by better-than-expected eurozone inflation figures.
Annual
consumer price inflation across the bloc was 0.3 per cent in May, higher than
analysts had expected, and easing fears over of deflationary stagnation for the
bloc.
(Πηγή: independent.co.uk)
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