Bloomberg
by James G
NeugerStephanie BodoniKarl Stagno Navarra
8:32 PM
EEST
May 11,
2015
Greece
handed the European Central Bank an excuse to maintain the life support for its
financial system by persuading its skeptical German-led creditors it’s serious
about delivering the policies needed to escape a default.
Less than
three weeks after a Greek aid meeting broke up in taunts and acrimony, Finance
Minister Yanis Varoufakis assured euro-area governments that his country is
aiming to strike a bargain to win the final installments of its 240
billion-euro ($268 billion) aid program.
“We are
making faster progress,” Dutch Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem told
reporters in Brussels
on Monday after leading a meeting of euro ministers. “I’m not satisfied but
just a bit more optimistic.”