Wed May 13,
2015 1:23pm EDT Related: GREECE
Reuters
Running out
of both cash and options to pursue, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras was to
preside over his third cabinet meeting in four days later on Wednesday to seek
a way out of an impasse in talks with lenders who refuse to dole out more aid.
Adding
further pressure on the government, data released on Wednesday showed the
country slid back into a recession in the first quarter, just months after exiting
a six-year depression. Analysts blamed the 0.2 percent decline in output
largely on the hit to sentiment and demand from the standoff.
For now,
Tsipras's government said its aim remained to strike a deal with its
international creditors rather than turn to a referendum or early elections. At
a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Athens
reiterated hopes for a deal by the end of the month - by which time it risks
running out of cash without new funds.
"We
are working toward an honorable compromise," Interior Minister Nikos
Voutsis told Mega TV. "An immediate recourse to a referendum or elections
is not in our plans right now."
Speculation
of a referendum had grown in recent days after EU paymaster Germany suggested Greece might need one to approve
painful economic reforms on which its creditors insist.
A deal with
lenders has proved elusive despite months of talks because of Tsipras's refusal
to bow to demands for additional pension cuts and labor reforms making it
easier to fire workers - all measures that the government says heaps
unacceptable pain on a long-suffering public.
In a sign
of the resistance Tsipras will face if he makes more concessions, the
Communist-affiliated group PAME called on unions to stage rallies on June 11
and prepare a strike to protest any new measures accepted as part of a deal
with lenders.
The
government says it will not back down from its red lines, but is doing all it
can to agree a deal and has called on lenders to show action from their end.
"We
are speeding up, we are doing everything that has been agreed," Nikos
Pappas, a senior aide to Tsipras, told Sto Kokkino radio. "We will work
with the same vigilance and determination to complete this deal despite those
who want to undermine it."
MUTUAL
CONCESSIONS
Finding a
deal on Greece
is taking time because it is hard to strike the right balance between the Greek
government's plans and the euro zone's rules, ECB executive board member Benoit
Coeure said. Still, the intent is to keep Greece in the euro single currency
and reach a deal soon, he said.
"Let's
be clear, all those involved in the discussions want Greece to stay in the euro zone ...
a Greek exit from the euro zone is not a working scenario," Coeure told
French lawmakers.
"We're
hoping to reach in the coming weeks a deal with the Greek government which can
be discussed by the Eurogroup," he said, referring to meetings of euro
zone finance ministers.
Failure to
strike a deal could pose disastrous consequences for Greece , which scraped through a 750
million euro debt payment to the IMF this week only by emptying out its IMF
reserves to avoid touching its fast-depleting cash coffers.
Central
government budget data also showed the state reduced public spending by 2
billion euros compared to the targeted level in the first four months of the
year, an apparent effort to preserve cash amid the financial storm.
(Additional
reporting by Jean-Baptiste Vey in Paris ,
writing by Deepa Babington)
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