… They think, that we think that the
unthinkable cannot be thought. But they better think again,…
5-2-2012
Euro zone
ministers had hoped to meet on Monday to finalize the second Greek bailout,
which has to be in place by mid-March if Athens
is to avoid a chaotic default, but the meeting was postponed because of Greek
reluctance to commit to reforms.
Instead,
the ministers held a conference call on Saturday to take stock of progress on
the second financing package, which euro zone leaders set at 130 billion euros
back in October.
"There
was a very clear message that was conveyed from all participants of the
teleconference ... to the Greeks that enough is enough," one euro zone
official said. "There is a great sense of frustration that they are
dragging their feet.
"They
should get their act together and start talking honestly, decisively and
speedily with the Troika on the aspects of the programme that remain to be
finalized - on fiscal and labor market reforms," the official said.
The Troika
are the representatives of the European Commission, the European Central Bank
and the International Monetary Fund, who have prepared a Greek debt
sustainability analysis on which the second financing programme will be based.
"The
main issue is the lack of reform, or prior action, in Greece ," a
second euro zone official said.
Euro zone
ministers were also dissatisfied with Greek Finance Minister Evangelos
Venizelos because they believed the minister was paying more attention to his
position within his party ahead of the April elections than to talks about
reforms.
"There
is a great sense of frustration with Minister Venizelos, who is very hard to
get hold of because he is very busy campaigning for the leadership of (the
Greek party) PASOK, so he is not available to meet with Troika members,"
the first official said.
The Greek
finance ministry said that comment seemed "ridiculous, if not suspicious,
to all those who have a basic knowledge of the minister's daily schedule."
The
ministry said his schedule included long meetings with troika representatives,
constant contacts with counterparts and heads of institutions involved in the
troika, meetings with the prime minister, teleconferences, contacts with the
Institute of International Finance on a planned bond swap and generally
"superhuman efforts made 24 hours a day" by a small group of people
led by Venizelos.
The first
euro zone official said ministers had vented their frustration to Venizelos
during the conference call.
"He is
preparing his own political future, rather than the future of his country.
People are seriously disgruntled about that and have conveyed this very clearly
to him this afternoon," the official said.
"There
is an increasing sense of frustration that why should we honor our part of the
bargain, which we have in the past, while Greece does not seem to care that
much, and has not delivered their part of the bargain," the official said.
In Athens , Venizelos
admitted to a growing sense of impatience with the Greeks.
"There
is great impatience and great pressure not only from the three institutions
that make up the troika but also from euro zone member states," Venizelos
said after what he called a "very difficult" conference call with euro
zone counterparts.
"The
moment is very crucial. Everything should be concluded by tomorrow night."
Jean-Claude
Juncker, who chairs the Eurogroup of euro zone finance ministers, voiced the
possibility of default.
"If we
were to establish that everything has gone wrong in Greece, there would be no
new programme, and that would mean that in March they have to declare
bankruptcy," he said in an advance copy of comments to news weekly Der
Spiegel.
The
restructuring is to help make Greek debt sustainable by cutting it to 120
percent of GDP in 2020 from 160 percent now.
But euro
zone governments will only agree to bolster the debt restructuring, called
private sector involvement (PSI), with 30 billion euros and further finance the
Greek government through 2014 if Athens
presses on with reforms.
"The
message to Greece
now is very clear. The PSI as it stands now is broadly OK, but we will not
allow you to go ahead with the PSI unless we have guarantees that the rest of
the reform to make the whole situation sustainable in the long run will be delivered,"
the first official said.
"We
don't want to give them the PSI, because once we do, we surrender our leverage
to obtain any more concrete commitments in terms of policy," the official
said. "Before we go ahead with the PSI ... we want to have assurances that
Greece
is actually capable of implementing the second programme."
Debt
restructuring is likely to hit Greek banks harder than others, because they
hold a lot of Greek government bonds.
Some EU
officials said on Friday that euro zone governments may now have to contribute
closer to 145 billion euros than the originally envisaged 130 billion to the
second financing package to help recapitalize Greek banks after the bond swap.
But there
is strong resistance to that idea from several countries, including paymaster Germany .
"It is
highly unlikely that the overall envelope will increase," the second
official said.
"In
some capitals there is absolutely no appetite whatsoever to reopen the size of
the financing package," the first official said.
WHO PAYS?
Investors
and some EU officials have suggested that any additional money needed to make
Greek debt sustainable could come from the ECB, which holds a portfolio of
around 40-50 billion euros worth of Greek paper.
The issue
was not discussed at the Saturday call, however.
"This
is off the table now. Everybody is saying now that before we can start
discussing what the public sector can do, should do or may do, let's talk to
the Greeks about what they are prepared to do," the first official said.
"If
the Greeks don't start delivering, the question of Official Sector Involvement
(OSI) is superfluous."
International
lenders to Greece
would like to see a lower minimum wage, the removal of the 13th and 14th month
"bonus" salary and the liberalization of labor markets - issues that
are politically difficult for Greek parties before the April elections.
"We
hope that over the next 12-24-48 hours they will get their act together and ...
discuss these matters very urgently with the Troika," the first official
said.
Euro zone
officials said that Greece ,
betting that the euro zone would not allow a disorderly default because of the
possible repercussions across the 17-country single currency bloc, was playing
a dangerous game.
"They think, that we think that the
unthinkable cannot be thought. But they better think again," the first
official said.
The euro
zone expects Greek politicians to come up with a consensus on reforms by
Monday, but a letter committing to reforms from political parties may not be
enough at this stage, the official said.
"We
don't care so much about signed letters by now, we want a clear timetable for
legislative action, we would expect them to put it in legislation and pass it
possibly before the end of February or in early March. That is the best
guarantee. Better than any signature," the first official said.
(Editing by
Mike Peacock and Will Waterman)
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