BY RENEE
MALTEZOU AND JAN STRUPCZEWSKI
ATHENS/BRUSSELS
Thu Feb 19, 2015 6:13am EST
(Reuters) -
Greece formally requested a
six-month extension to its euro zone loan agreement on Thursday, offering major
concessions as it raced to avoid running out of cash within weeks and overcome
resistance from skeptical partners led by Germany .
With its
EU/IMF bailout program due to expire in little more than a week, the government
of leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras urgently needs to secure a financial
lifeline to keep the country afloat beyond late March.
Euro zone
finance ministers will meet on Friday afternoon in Brussels to consider the request, the
chairman of their Eurogroup, Jeroen Dijsselbloem, said in a tweet.
That raised
hopes of a deal to avert possible bankruptcy and a Greek exit from the
19-nation currency area.
A
government official told Reuters that Athens
had asked for an extension to its "Master Financial Assistance Facility
Agreement" with the euro zone. However, he insisted the government was
proposing different terms from its current bailout obligations.
In the
document seen by Reuters, Greece
pledged to meet its financial obligations to all creditors, recognize the
existing EU/IMF program as the legally binding framework and refrain from
unilateral action that would undermine the fiscal targets.
Crucially,
it accepted that the extension would be monitored by the European Commission,
European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund, a climbdown by Tsipras
who had vowed to end cooperation with "troika" inspectors accused of
inflicting deep economic and social damage on Greece .
The six
month interim period would be used to negotiate a long-term deal for recovery
and growth incorporating further debt relief measures promised by the Eurogroup
in 2012.
Euro zone
partners have so far said Athens
must comply with the terms of the current bailout, which require it to run a 3
percent primary budget surplus this year, before debt service payments.
Senior euro
zone officials were due to hold a teleconference later on Thursday to discuss
the Greek application.
The wording
chosen could help to satisfy at least some of the concerns that have held up
agreement over the past two weeks, allowing Athens to avoid saying it is extending the
current program that it opposes while creditors can avoid accepting a
"loan agreement" without strings attached.
Crucial
details remain to be clarified on the fiscal targets, labor market reforms,
privatization and other measures due to be implemented under the existing
program.
Government
spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis dismissed a German newspaper report that Athens was under pressure
to impose capital controls on Greeks pulling their money out of local banks,
telling Reuters that such a scenario "had no bearing on reality".
An ECB
spokeswoman also denied the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung report, saying there
had been no discussion of capital controls at a meeting of the central bank's
Governing Council on Wednesday, which slightly raised the limit on emergency
lending to Greek banks.
Greek
stocks rose on Thursday's developments, with the benchmark Athens stock index up 2 percent while banks
gained 9 percent.
"We
are doing everything to reach a mutually beneficial agreement. Our aim is to
conclude this agreement soon," Sakellaridis told Skai TV earlier on
Thursday. "We are trying to find common points."
GERMAN
COMPROMISE?
EU
paymaster Germany
and fellow euro zone governments have so far insisted no loan deal without the
full bailout conditions is on the table. Tsipras promised to ditch austerity
measures imposed by the lenders when he was elected last month.
German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has poured scorn on suggestions that Athens could negotiate an
extension of euro zone funding without making any promises to push on with
budget cuts and economic reforms.
But on
Wednesday he indicated there may be some possibility of a compromise. "Our
room for maneuver is limited," he said during a debate in Berlin , adding, "We must keep in mind that we have a
huge responsibility to keep Europe
stable."
Greek
Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis expressed confidence on Wednesday that euro
zone finance ministers would approve the Athens
government's proposal on Friday. "The application will be written in such
a way so that it will satisfy both the Greek side and the president of the
Eurogroup," he said.
Likewise
its banks are dependent on the emergency funding controlled by the ECB in order
to pay out depositors who have been withdrawing their cash. The ECB agreed on
Wednesday to raise a cap on funding available under its Emergency Liquidity
Assistance scheme to 68.3 billion euros (US$78 billion), a person familiar with
the ECB talks said.
That was a
rise of just 3.3 billion euros, less than Greece had requested. The modest
increase raises the pressure for a compromise at the Eurogroup. One senior
banker said it would be enough to keep Greek banks afloat only for another week
if present outflow trends persist.
Euro zone
finance ministers rejected Greek proposals to avoid the bailout conditions at a
meeting on Monday.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel made clear on Wednesday that Athens would have to give as well as take in
negotiations.
"If
countries are in trouble, we show solidarity," she said in a speech to
conservative supporters, naming Greece
and other euro zone countries that had to take bailout during the debt crisis.
But she added, "Solidarity is not a one-way street. Solidarity and efforts
by the countries themselves are two sides of the same coin. And this
won’t change."
(Additional
reporting by Renee Maltezou and Deepa Babington in Athens, Jan Strupczewski in
Brussels, Gernot Heller, Michael Nienaber and Caroline Copley in Berlin, Jason
Lange in Washington and Paul Carrel in Frankfurt; Writing by David Stamp and
Deepa Babington; Editing by Peter Graff and Paul Taylor)
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