Greek
Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis has rejected both an exit from the eurozone
and an agreement on its debt with unreachable economic targets. Meanwhile, the
IMF refused a delay in Greek debt repayments.
Following comments from the head of the International
Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde, that the IMF would not agree to let Greece
delay a scheduled bailout payment, Varoufakis said, "Our only rational
pro-European response is to spend every waking hour... trying to reach an
honorable agreement."
But in prepared remarks for a speech at the Brookings
Institution, the Washington centrist think tank, Varoufakis said, "We will
not sign up to targets we know our economy cannot meet by means of policies
that our partners should not wish to impose."
Varoufakis said the European Commission, European Central
Bank, and the IMF needed to give some ground on their demands for reforms, and
recognize that the previous bailout approach of deep austerity had failed.
"We've tried that medicine but it hasn't worked," he said.
There are concerns that the European Union's April 24
deadline to come to an agreement in principle with Athens over terms for a new
loan will be missed. A deal would allow the country to make key debt payments
to the IMF and ECB over the next two months.
Varoufakis did not say which issues were holding up the
agreement, but said the two sides shared "a great deal" of common
ground. He also referred to the problems the lack of a deal were causing to
Greece's already weakened economy: "The longer these negotiations go on,
the greater the asphyxiation of our economy."
"The negotiation must succeed," he added. "It
will be such a shame that this agreement is not concluded in the next few days,
weeks."
Lagarde, EU position
Speaking in Washington on Thursday, Lagarde said the IMF
would not agree to let Greece delay a scheduled bailout payment. She said the
IMF needed to protect its reputation as a global lender.
"We have never had an advanced economy asking for
payment delays," Lagarde said as she answered reporters' questions on
Greece's debt crisis.
Speaking earlier in Washington, EU Economic and Monetary
Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici said the financial fallout from a
potential Greek exit from the eurozone could be contained. But he said a Grexit
would present a political rupture raising questions on which country might be
next: "It would be a catastrophe for the eurozone," he said.
Lagarde met with Varoufakis in Washington and said Greece
and its lenders needed to "get on with the work" of evaluating
Athens' reform plans and coming to an agreement. "To do that, it's not
done by a political, last-minute accord," she said. "It's done by ...
the tedious work of finance ministers, wherever they are, and the
lenders."
jm/bw (Reuters, AFP)
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