A prominent
German newspaper has reported that Greece has enough liquidity to last
roughly two more weeks. If Athens fails to
submit viable reforms by then, Brussels
will reclassify the country's finances as "critical."
Deutche
Welle
22-03-2015
According
to the Sunday edition of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung (FAS), EU
Commission experts in Athens
have confirmed that the country's coffers would be able to finance salaries and
wages until the second week of April.
The
Commission's estimates presume that the Greek government will have to dip into
the country's social insurance fund and state-owned enterprises in order to
continue paying government employees, diplomatic sources told FAS.
From April
9, Greece
must repay a 467-million-euro ($505-million) loan to the International Monetary
Fund (IMF). It must also refinance short-term government bonds in the days
following the IMF deadline.
Greek Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras must also convince Brussels in approximately the same time
period that his government, which first came to power in January, can implement
effective reforms. Doing so will unlock 7.2 billion euros for the
crisis-stricken country, the final tranche of its 240-billion EU-IMF loan.
On Friday,
Tsipras assured the heads of EU institutions that they could expect a list of
reforms "in the coming days."
'Humanitarian
crisis' plea resonates with Brussels
Fears have
been running high over the potentially catastrophic repercussions for Greece and its
fellow EU members if Tsipras cannot convince creditors to release more money by
the April deadline. Not only would the worsening crisis negatively impact the
value of the euro, it would also inflict a larger toll on the lives of average
Greek citizens.
Responding
to an appeal by Tsipras on Friday, EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker
indicated the European body's readiness to release roughly 2 billion euros to
help the Greek people.
"Greece confronts a serious social problem, a
humanitarian crisis," Juncker told a press conference after meeting with
EU leaders in Brussels .
"This
will not be used to fill Greece 's
coffers, but to support efforts to create growth and social cohesion in Greece ,"
he clarified.
Tsipras
readies for Berlin
visit
With a
highly-anticipated deadline fast approaching, Greece 's
head of government is scheduled to make his first official visit to Berlin to meet with
Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday.
"We
will have time to talk to each other in detail and perhaps also argue,"
Merkel told the German parliament last week.
Political
discord between Berlin and Athens
has worsened in recent weeks, particularly as a result of renewed demands that Germany pay
reparations for World War II.
A
controversial interview with Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis on German
public television, followed days later by a biting response by one of Germany's
leading satirists, have also fueled public debate in Germany about how its own
media portrays Greece.
kms/cmk (AFP,
Reuters, dpa)
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