The
International Monetary Fund is urging finance ministers in the eurozone to get
to the negotiation table and start working out a deal to provide Greece with
debt relief because talks to find €3 billion of cuts in Greece’s budget have
reached a stalemate.
Business Insider has so far been unable to
obtain a complete copy of Lagarde’s letter, but here are some of the key
extracts, as reported by the FT (emphasis ours):
“We believe that specific [economic reform]
measures, debt restructuring, and financing must now be discussed
contemporaneously.
“For us to support Greece with a new IMF
arrangement, it is essential that the financing and debt relief from Greece’s
European partners are based on fiscal targets that are realistic because they
are supported by credible measures to reach them.”
Lagarde is urging action ahead of an
emergency meeting of Greece’s creditors on Monday, after talks about so-called
“contingency” budget cuts - which have gone on for a month - failed to find any
solution. In the letter, Lagarde also rebuffs critics who have suggested that
the IMF is being “inflexible” and argues that the fund is fundamentally against
the implementation of more austerity measures.
“A clarification is needed to clear
unfounded allegations that the IMF is being inflexible, calling for unnecessary
new fiscal measures and - as a result - causing a delay in negotiations and the
disbursement of urgently needed funds,” she wrote.
The IMF, and its European chief Poul
Thomsen, have been criticised by senior Greek officials for making overzealous
demands regarding the country’s austerity programme in recent months. In the
letter, Lagarde also reiterates the IMF’s belief that Greece won’t be able to
reach the 3.5% budget surplus by 2018 that is currently being mandated by the
EU. A 1.5% surplus would be more realistic, she believes. Here’s Lagarde one
final time (emphasis ours):
Let there be no doubt that meeting this
higher target would not only be very difficult to reach, but possibly
counterproductive. We do not believe that it will be possible to reach a 3.5
per cent of GDP primary surplus by relying on hiking already high taxes levied
on a narrow base, cutting excessively discretionary spending, and counting
one-off measures as has been proposed in recent weeks.
Πηγή: businessinsider.com
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