Friday, June 12, 2015

A Greek Suicide?

JUN 11, 2015 21

By Anatole Kaletsky

Project Syndicate

LONDON – The good news is that a Greek default, which has become more likely after Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ provocative rejection of what he described as the “absurd” bailout offer by Greece’s creditors, no longer poses a serious threat to the rest of Europe. The bad news is that Tsipras does not seem to understand this.

Greece Told to Stop Fighting Creditors' Demands as Deadline Nears


by Karl Stagno NavarraCorina Ruhe

June 11, 2015 — 3:02 PM EEST Updated on June 12, 2015 — 11:43 AM EEST

Bloomberg

Greece was told to stop fighting creditors’ demands and sign a deal that will avert a default as officials plan for a worsening of the crisis.

El-Erian sounds alarm over crisis in Greece

Published: June 11, 2015 11:26 a.m. ET

Market Watch

By SARA SJOLIN MARKETS REPORTER

“…unemployment rate in the Hellenic Republic rose to 26.6% in the first quarter of the year, up from 26.1% in October-December…”

Keeping Greece in the Euro May Have Nothing to Do With Finances

by Maria Petrakis
June 12, 2015 — 2:01 AM EEST
 Bloomberg
A bronze statue of Harry S. Truman stands unguarded along a busy Athens road, a reminder of Greece’s post-World War II position as a strategic bulwark for the U.S. and Europe.
If euro-area policy makers overcome their frustration over Greek financial brinkmanship and cough up more aid, it will be in no small part because of that role.
Greece’s geopolitical potential has been used as a promise, but mostly as a threat,” said Eirini Karamouzi, lecturer in contemporary history at Sheffield University and author of a book on Greece’s relationship with Europe during the Cold War. “There’s always been the threat of a catastrophic spillover effect if Greece was left to its own devices or, worse, turn into a failed state in Europe’s backyard.”

Despite IMF walkout, Greece hopes for deal on June 18

Fri Jun 12, 2015 2:53am EDT Related: GREECE
ATHENS

Greece hopes to clinch a deal with its lenders at a meeting of eurozone finance ministers on June 18, the state minister said on Friday, as time runs short for the country to stave off default at the end of the month.

The statement by Alekos Flabouraris came a day after the International Monetary Fund walked away from negotiations in Brussels, citing major differences, and a top EU leader bluntly told Athens to stop "gambling" with its future.

Greece at the Cliff’s Edge

Creditors warn Athens not to expect a better offer.


June 11, 2015 6:52 p.m. ET

The Wall Street Journal

Greece’s talks with creditors entered a new stage Thursday as the International Monetary Fund withdrew from bailout talks. This is the bluntest in a series of increasingly impatient statements from creditors that all make the same point: Athens won’t get a better deal.

I.M.F. Recalls Negotiators as Deadline Looms for Greek Deal

By LIZ ALDERMAN and LANDON THOMAS Jr.JUNE 11, 2015

The New York Times

PARIS — The plotline is familiar by now in Greece’s long-running debt crisis, as bailout talks once again hit a major snag. But at this stage just weeks before the bailout expires, the latest twist could have more serious repercussions.

On Thursday, the International Monetary Fund sent its negotiators on the Greek rescue program back to Washington, in the starkest sign yet that Athens may be forced to default on its debts at the end of the month.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Tusk Says Greece Must Bow to Reality as Gambling Now Over

by James G Neuger
June 11, 2015 — 3:02 PM EEST Updated on June 11, 2015 — 3:31 PM EEST

Bloomberg

European Union President Donald Tusk accused Greece of playing games with its future in the euro zone and pressed Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s government to make concessions in order to escape economic ruin.

As Greece lurches toward default, businesses hit the wall

Wed Jun 10, 2015 9:32am EDT Related: GREECE
ATHENS | BY ANGELIKI KOUTANTOU

Reuters

When construction of four 6.5 billion euro toll roads across Greece resumed last year, Greek and foreign businesses rejoiced.

Greece Is the Crisis Club’s Odd Man Out

Stunted export sector makes eurozone’s weakest link less responsive to bailout medicine
 The Wall Street Journal
By GREG IP
Updated June 10, 2015 2:06 p.m. ET
53 COMMENTS
Odds are Greece and its international creditors will strike some sort of deal to avoid default before a deadline looming at the end of June.

The bigger question is whether Greece will emerge from a new bailout any better able to grow, and thus support its debts, than it did from prior deals.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

What Game Is Greece Playing?

15 JUN 10, 2015 2:00 AM EDT
By Mark Buchanan
 Bloomberg



The repeated willingness of Greece and its creditors to bring the entire euro area to the brink of disaster presents a difficult and fascinating question for economic theorists: What game are they really playing?

On the surface, it seems like a classic game of chicken, in which each side tries to look determined enough to make the other crumble. The creditors, including the European Union, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank, insist that they can't provide any more debt relief or loosen their austerity demands any further. Greece pushes for more, suggesting that it is willing to default on its debts, possibly triggering an unraveling of the monetary union, if it doesn't get its way.

Grexit: Will Greece Leave The Euro And What Will Happen If It Does?


Clem Chambers, CONTRIBUTOR

Forbes

Will Greece leave the euro? Surely not. Europe must muddle through. There will be a deal and both sides will claim victory and clasped hands will be raised.

Everyone knows there will be no Grexit, only more grandstanding for the gullible home audiences of Europe.

But wait, what if there is a Greek exit from the euro? Leaving the euro is not leaving Europe. It is not even close. And what happens if Greece stays in, what more misery follows for all?

Grexit would be 'start of the end for the eurozone,' says Tsipras



Greek PM Alexis Tsipras has warned in an interview of the costs to EU taxpayers if his country left the eurozone. Athens has meanwhile finally submitted a promised reform plan to its creditors.


In the interview in the Tuesday edition of Italy's Corriere della Sera, Tsipras said that if Greece were forced out of the eurozone after failing to make a deal on managing its debt, Spain or Italy could soon follow, precipitating the collapse of the currency bloc.

American Billionaire Makes Risky Bet on Greece Debt Deal

By JACK EWING
JUNE 9, 2015

The New York Times

FRANKFURT — The contrarian American billionaire Wilbur L. Ross Jr. made a bundle betting on the Irish banking system when it was down and out, and a similar wager on Cyprus now looks promising. But Greece may prove to be the toughest test yet of his knack for cashing in on eurozone crisis spots.

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

The economics of bluffing


Buttonwood

When political leaders turn into option-writers
May 30th 2015 |

The Economist

WILL Greece default on its debts and leave the euro? Will Britain decide to leave the European Union? Politicians in the two countries have threatened, implicitly or explicitly, to take these drastic steps if their European colleagues do not offer them inducements to stay.

Greece delivers reform plan to EU, warns on cost of failure

Tue Jun 9, 2015 7:15am EDT Related: ITALY, GREECE
ATHENS/BRUSSELS | BY RENEE MALTEZOU AND JAN STRUPCZEWSKI

Reuters

Greece handed its creditors new proposals on unlocking funds to keep the country from default, with Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras offering hope for a deal and warning the cost of failure would be enormous.

The reform proposals mark a further attempt by Tsipras to compromise with lenders as time runs out to reach a deal to prevent his country going bankrupt.

Greece Said to Submit Revised Budget Plan in Bid for Funding

by Nikos Chrysoloras
June 9, 2015 — 10:53 AM EEST Updated on June 9, 2015 — 11:59 AM EEST

Bloomberg

The Greek government submitted a three-page budget proposal to its creditors in Brussels in a bid to unlock bailout funds, two international officials with direct knowledge of the discussions said.
The document covered only fiscal targets, one of the people said. Greece gave its creditors a separate note, also three pages long, on how to address the country’s financing needs, in which the government asked to use funds from the European Stability Mechanism to repay about 6.7 billions euros ($7.6 billion) of bonds held by the European Central Bank that come due in July and August, the people said.

Merkel-Schaeuble Differences Over Greece Talks Said to Widen

by Birgit JennenRainer BuerginBrian Parkin
June 8, 2015 — 7:16 PM EEST Updated on June 9, 2015 — 12:40 PM EEST

Bloomberg

A split between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble is widening over Greece as the funding standoff goes down to the wire, said people familiar with the matter.
Merkel is ready to make concessions to keep Greece in the euro because of geopolitical concerns, while Schaeuble is willing to let the country exit the euro unless its government takes measures to ensure the country’s long-term survival in the monetary union, said the people, who asked not be identified speaking about internal party discussions.

Εδώ, οι καλές διαπραγματεύσεις...

ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ 07.06.2015 : 18:43

Από τον Πάσχο Μανδραβέλη
Εφημερίδα Καθημερινή

Και σε ποιον ακριβώς πλανήτη ζούσε μέχρι πρότινος ο αναπληρωτής υπουργός Οικονομικών κ. Ευκλείδης Τσακαλώτος, που δήλωσε «σοκαρισμένος από το τελεσίγραφο των δανειστών»; Δεν διάβαζε εφημερίδες; Δεν είχε ακούσει τίποτε για τη σθεναρή τους στάση απέναντι στην κυβέρνηση Σαμαρά; Δεν πήρε χαμπάρι τίποτε στις «διαπραγματεύσεις» όπου συμμετείχε ως πρωταγωνιστής; Μήπως βρισκόταν σ’ έναν άλλο κόσμο τον οποίο θεωρούσε εφικτό; Και επιπλέον: τι εμπιστοσύνη μπορούμε να έχουμε σε μια διαπραγματευτική ομάδα, όταν ο επικεφαλής της δεν μπορεί να προβλέψει και «σοκάρεται» από τις εξελίξεις;

Greece talks of compromise as Merkel warns time is short

Mon Jun 8, 2015 5:03pm EDT Related: GREECE
ATHENS/KRUEN, GERMANY | BY RENEE MALTEZOU AND NOAH BARKIN


Reuters

Greece proclaimed a new willingness to compromise with its international creditors on Monday, as German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that time was running out for a reform-for-aid deal to keep the country in the euro.

Three days after Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras told his parliament the latest proposal from the EU and IMF was "absurd", the Greek government said it was ready to negotiate a settlement acceptable to both sides by the end of this month - when Greece's bailout program expires and it faces the prospect of default on its debts.