… It may take Greece much
more time than assumed to identify and implement the necessary structural and
fiscal reforms…
… Athens is expected to generate a primary
surplus of 4.5 percent in 2014…
The analysis, prepared by the European Commission, the
European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund for euro zone finance
ministers and obtained exclusively by Reuters, shows that after the debt swap
at the weekend, Greek debt could fall to 116.5 percent of GDP in 2020 and 88
percent in 2030.
"Results show that the program can place Greek debt on
a sustainable trajectory," said the analysis, marked strictly
confidential. However, it also warned that the debt trajectory was extremely
sensitive and the program was "accident prone".
It said the restructuring of privately held Greek bonds
would help to initially reduce debt, but that debt would spike up again to 164
percent of GDP in 2013 due to the shrinking economy and incomplete fiscal
adjustment.
"Once the fiscal adjustment is complete, growth has
been restored, and privatization receipts are accruing, steady reductions of
the debt ratio commence. Greece
would have to maintain good policies through 2030 to reduce the ratio below 100
percent of GDP," the report said.
The euro zone may also have to be prepared to lend even more
money to Athens ,
the report said.
It said that when Greece tries to return to markets
after 2014, it would first have to issue short-term debt and still pay high
interest rates because its debt ratio would still be high, it would have senior
debt to pay back first and it would need to establish a considerable track
record with the market.
"This would initially discourage large issuances and
imply continued reliance on official financing, as committed by Euro area
member states on standard EFSF borrowing terms, provided Greece
successfully implements its program," the report said.
LOTS OF RISKS
The road to sustainable debt will be long and fraught with
risks, the authors said, underlining the delicate balance Greek politicians are
going to have to make in the coming decades.
"The Greek authorities may not be able to implement
reforms at the pace envisioned in the baseline," it said.
"Greater wage flexibility may in practice be resisted
by economic agents; product and service market liberalization may continue to
be plagued by strong opposition from vested interests; and business environment
reforms may also remain bogged down in bureaucratic delays," it said.
It may take Greece
much more time than assumed to identify and implement the necessary structural
and fiscal reforms to improve the primary balance from -1 percent in 2012
to the required 4.5 percent of GDP, it said.
"Concerning assets sales, delays may arise due to
market-related constraints, encumbrances on assets, or political hurdles. And
of course a less favorable macro outcome would itself further hurt policy
implementation prospects," it said.
In the less favorable scenario, the debt ratio would peak at
170 percent of GDP in 2014. Once growth recovers, fiscal policy achieves its
target and privatization picks up, debt would begin to slowly decline. Debt to
GDP would fall to around 145.5 percent of GDP by 2020.
The analysis forecasts that after another year of recession
this year, the Greek economy will stabilize in 2013 and see a mild recovery in
2014-2017 and then growth at its potential rate of 2.5 percent annually.
(Reporting by Jan Strupczewski; editing by Rex Merrifield)
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