(Reuters) -
Greek business and household bank deposits rose again in November as doubts
over the country's euro zone membership eased, but credit to the private sector
continued to contract, official data showed on Thursday.
Bank of
Greece figures showed deposits increased for the third consecutive month - by
640 million euros to 155.89 billion euros ($206.3 billion) at the end of
November from 155.25 billion euros in October.
Banks lost
about a third of their deposits since the country's debt crisis erupted in late
2009, partly due to capital flight on fears of a euro zone exit.
The
shrinking deposit base added to strains on Greek lenders, which lost access to
international funding markets and have come to depend on central bank funding
for their liquidity.
Deposits
have risen over the past few months after confidence increased that Greece 's
European partners would continue bankrolling the country to keep it in the euro
zone.
Central
bank data also showed that bank lending to Greece 's private sector contracted
further in November, as the country's deep economic slump sapped demand for
loans.
The Bank of
Greece said credit shrank 4.6 percent on an annual basis in November, with the
pace of decline easing slightly from October's 4.8 percent.
Years of
recession and tight credit conditions are eating into the borrowing that once
fuelled consumption and economic expansion in Greece , which is struggling to
emerge from a debt crisis that brought it to the brink of bankruptcy.
The economy
is projected to contract for a sixth consecutive year in 2013 with gross
domestic product (GDP) projected to shrink by 4.5 percent.
The central
bank said credit to households and private non-profit institutions shrank 3.9
percent in November after a 4.1 percent drop in October. Credit to businesses
declined 5.4 percent after a 5.6 percent drop in the previous month.
(Reporting
by George Georgiopoulos; editing by Stephen Nisbet)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/01/03/us-greece-deposits-idUSBRE9020DL20130103
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