By LIZ
ALDERMAN and NIKI KITSANTONISFEB. 9, 2015
The New
York Times
The plan
will include the possibility of tapping part of a bailout loan disbursement of
7 billion euros, or $7.9 billion, that Athens
had been saying it would reject, according to the official, who insisted on
anonymity because the plans had not yet been made public.
The
proposal, to be made at a gathering of eurozone finance ministers on Wednesday
in Brussels , would also significantly extend the
period Greece
proposes for reaching a “new contract” with its creditors — by asking for a
bridge-financing program through the end of August, instead of the May time
frame Greek officials had previously discussed.
The offer
was being pulled together as the dispute escalated between Greece and its
European creditors. In a speech in Parliament on Sunday, the new prime
minister, Alexis Tsipras, appeared to draw a hard line, saying he was determined
to eliminate Greece ’s
“cruel” austerity program. German officials have insisted that Greece would
get no money to help pay debts unless it adhered to the conditions of the
bailout program agreed to in 2012.
Chancellor
Angela Merkel of Germany
appeared to show little leeway on Monday. “The basic rules” of the Greek
bailout program “have always been the same,” she said at a joint news
conference with President Obama in Washington .
“You put in your own efforts and on the other side you’re being shown solidarity.
A quid pro quo.”
Mr. Obama,
who last week warned Europe not to press too hard on austerity, said he was
anticipating Ms. Merkel’s appraisal and hoped Europe
would find ways to improve growth.
“I look
forward to hearing Angela’s assessment of how Europe and the I.M.F. can work
with the new Greek government to find a way that returns Greece to sustainable growth within the
eurozone,” Mr. Obama said at the news conference, noting that European growth
was important for the global economy and the United States . The International
Monetary Fund is one of Greece ’s
creditors.
Despite the
charm offensive mounted by Greece ’s
new leftist-led government in European capitals last week, the country’s
European creditors have shown little inclination to help Mr. Tsipras and his
cabinet follow through on their campaign pledges to relax the austerity budget
measures that were a condition of the bailout. The standoff has raised concerns
that Greece
might be heading for a default on its debt or an exit from the euro currency
union.
On Monday,
Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the European Commission — the executive
arm of the European Union — said in Brussels
that “Greece
should not assume that the overall mood has so changed that the eurozone will
adopt Tsipras’s government program unconditionally.”
The Athens stock exchange
slumped on Monday’s tensions, with bank stocks falling as much as 14 percent.
The yield on Greek three-year government bonds — a debt security of which Mr.
Tsipras wants to issue more often to cover Greece’s financing needs — surged to
21.74 percent, the highest since July. If yields stayed at that level, the
Greek government could find new borrowing unaffordable.
Greek
government officials, for their part, say they do not believe European officials
will let Greece
go bankrupt or leave the European Union — a fate Mr. Tsipras has said he also
wants to avoid. The eurozone could collapse “like a house of cards” if that
were to happen, Yanis Varoufakis, Greece’s new finance minister, warned on Sunday
in an interview on Italian television.
Greece’s
creditors — the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the I.M.F. —
want the government to seek an extension beyond Feb. 28 of the European portion
of the €240 billion bailout. But the government has been saying it is not
interested in the latest portion of the bailout, the loan of €7 billion,
because of what it sees as conditions that have hurt average Greeks.
The
apparent reversal of that position on Monday comes as Greece is
running low on cash as well as time to pay off a looming series of debts. The
official said Greece
would also ask its European Union partners on Wednesday for the right to issue
about €8 billion of further short-term debt above a current €15 billion limit.
The government would further seek permission to raise the amount of money that
Greek banks can tap under an emergency liquidity assistance program. There have
been signs that capital has been fleeing Greek bank accounts.
The Greek
government also plans to pledge that it will crack down on tax evasion and
corruption.
Among other
measures, Greek officials will ask creditors to agree that the country's
“humanitarian crisis” be addressed by allowing the new government to roll back
a series of austerity measures that Mr. Tsipras outlined Sunday, including
increasing some low-level pensions by the end of the year, immediately
restoring collective wage bargaining and bringing unions back into negotiations
on workers’ salaries and working conditions.
The
government will also push for the minimum wage to gradually be restored to €751
a month, up from €586 currently.
At least
one key European official indicated on Monday that Greece might continue to meet a
skeptical audience among its creditors. If Greece
wants to buy time by arranging some sort of bridge financing, it must still
submit to an internationally supervised program of economic reforms, Wolfgang
Schäuble, the German finance minister, said at a meeting of the Group of 20
finance ministers on Monday in Istanbul .
“Without a
program, things will be tough for Greece ,” Mr. Schäuble said. “I
wouldn’t know how financial markets will handle it without a program, but maybe
he knows better,” he said, referring to Mr. Tsipras.
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