Greece
passed a second bundle of policy measures demanded by the country’s European
creditors as Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras urged lawmakers to stop the country
being forced out of the euro.
Echoing the rhetoric of the predecessors he
once demonized, Tsipras said he’ll implement the creditors’ program even though
he thinks the policies being imposed are wrong. He insisted he’ll do everything
he can to improve the final deal.
“Conservative forces within Europe still
insist on their plans to kick Greece out of the euro,” Tsipras told legislators
in the early hours of Thursday. “We chose a compromise that forces us to
implement a program we don’t believe in and we will implement it, because the
choices we have are tough.”
The prime minister is trying to hold
together his ad hoc majority long enough to finalize the 86 billion-euro ($93
billion) bailout program the country needs to stave off financial collapse.
Abandoned by party hardliners, Tsipras is reliant on his political opponents to
deliver the measures that creditors have demanded.
The new banking rules will, in theory,
shield taxpayers from the cost of bank failures and stipulate that unsecured
depositors -- those with more than 100,000 euros with an individual bank --
will face losses before the public purse. Shareholders, senior and junior
creditors will be in line to take a hit before depositors.
However, the law won’t come into effect
until the start of 2016 and Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos told lawmakers
that banks will already have been recapitalized by then. Greek lenders are in
line for as much as 25 billion euros of new capital under the outline terms of
the new bailout program.
Πηγή: bloomberg.com
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