BY RENEE
MALTEZOU AND INGRID MELANDER
BRUSSELS Tue Feb 17, 2015 4:19am EST
(Reuters) -
Talks between Greece and
euro zone finance ministers over the country's debt crisis broke down on Monday
when Athens
rejected a proposal to request a six-month extension of its international
bailout package as "unacceptable".
The
unexpectedly rapid collapse raised doubts about Greece 's future in the single
currency area after a new leftist-led government vowed to scrap the 240 billion
euro ($272.4 billion) bailout, reverse austerity policies and end cooperation
with EU/IMF inspectors.
Dutch
Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who chaired the meeting, said Athens had until Friday
to request an extension, otherwise the bailout would expire at the end of the
month. The Greek state and its banks would then face a looming cash crunch.
How long Greece can keep
itself afloat without foreign support is uncertain. The euro fell against the
dollar after the talks broke up but with Wall Street closed for a holiday, the
full force of any market reaction may only be felt on Tuesday.
The
European Central Bank will decide on Wednesday whether to maintain emergency
lending to Greek banks that are bleeding deposits at an estimated rate of 2
billion euros ($2.27 billion) a week. The state faces some heavy loan
repayments in March.
Seemingly
determined not to be browbeaten by a chorus of EU ministers intoning that he
needed to swallow Greek pride and come back to ask for the extension, Finance
Minister Yanis Varoufakis, a left-wing academic economist, voiced confidence
that a deal on different terms was within reach within days.
"I
have no doubt that, within the next 48 hours Europe, is going to come together
and we shall find the phrasing that is necessary so that we can submit it and
move on to do the real work that is necessary," Varoufakis told a news
conference, warning that the language of ultimatum never worked in Europe .
He cited
what he called a "splendid" proposal from the European Commission by
which Greece
would get four to six months credit in return for a freeze on its
anti-austerity policies. He said he had been ready to sign that - but that
Dijsselbloem had then presented a different, and "highly
problematic", deal.
A draft of
what Dijsselbloem proposed, swiftly leaked by furious Greek officials, spoke of
Athens
extending and abiding by its "current programme" - anathema to a
government which, as Varoufakis said, was elected last month to scrap the
package.
"MORE
LOGIC, LESS IDEOLOGY"
Commission
officials denied offering a separate plan and the man Varoufakis said presented
it, Economics Commissioner Pierre Moscovici, stuck to the same script as
Dijsselbloem.
"We
need more logic and less ideology," Moscovici said as EU officials fretted
about how seriously the novice Greek leaders were taking their finances and how
far concerns about semantics and saving political face might trump pressing
economic needs.
Dijsselbloem,
who insisted he was willing to be flexible on terminology that has become
highly charged for Greek voters, said further talks would depend on Greece
requesting a bailout. Varoufakis and the other ministers will remain in Brussels on Tuesday for a
routine meeting on the EU economy.
"The
general feeling in the Eurogroup is still that the best way forward would be
for the Greek authorities to seek an extension of the programme,"
Dijsselbloem told a news briefing.
Echoing
that, Moscovici insisted there was no "Plan B", a phrase bounced back
in his turn by Varoufakis, who invoked the language of high stakes poker:
"It's not a bluff," he said.
"It's
Plan A. There is no Plan B."
The talks,
which had been expected to last late into the night, broke up in less than four
hours - less even than a previous meeting last Wednesday after which EU
officials voiced concern and astonishment at the Greeks' lack of preparation.
The euro
dropped nearly a U.S. cent on word of stalemate, though edge back to $1.1350,
about 0.5 percent down on the day.
Both sides
showed signs of fraying patience, with several ministers complaining of
disappointment and fearing "disaster". Dijsselbloem and Varoufakis
spoke of a need to rebuild trust.
Asked what
would happen if Greece did
not request a bailout extension, Edward Scicluna, the finance minister of the
smallest EU state Malta
said: "That would be it; it would be a disaster.
"Greece has to
adjust, to realise the seriousness of the situation, because time is running
out."
German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said before the talks that Greece had lived beyond its means for a long
time and there was no appetite in Europe for
giving it any more money without guarantees it was getting its finances in
order.
MONEY
FLEEING
As the
meeting in Brussels broke up, a senior Greek
banker said Greece 's
stance boded ill for the markets and the banks.
"It is
a very negative development for the economy and the banks. The outflows will
continue. We are losing 400-500 million (euros) every day and that means about
2 billion every week. We will have pressure on stocks and bond yields
tomorrow," he said.
Varoufakis
spelled out in a combative New York Times column Greece's refusal to be treated
as a "debt colony" subjected to "the greatest austerity for the
most depressed economy", adding: "The lines that we have presented as
red will not be crossed."
An opinion
poll showed 68 percent of Greeks want a "fair" compromise with euro
zone partners while 30 percent said the government should stand tough even if
it means reverting to the drachma. The poll found 81 percent want to stay in
the euro.
Deposit
outflows in Greece have picked up. JP Morgan bank said that at the current pace
Greek banks had only 14 weeks before they run out of collateral to obtain funds
from the central bank.
The ECB has
allowed the Greek central bank to provide emergency lending to the banks, but a
failure of the debt talks could mean the imposition of capital controls.
Euro zone
member Cyprus was forced to close its banks for two weeks and introduce capital
controls during a 2013 crisis. Such controls would need to be imposed when
banks are closed. Greek banks are closed next Monday for a holiday.
(Additional
reporting by Yann Le Guernigou, Michael Nienaber, Andrew Callus, Jan
Strupczewski, Alastair Macdonald, Adrian Croft, Foo Yun Chee, Robin Emmott, Tom
Koerkemeier, Julia Fioretti and Francesca Landini; Writing by Jeremy Gaunt,
Paul Taylor and Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Paul Taylor, Giles Elgood and
Eric Walsh)
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