Sat Aug 15,
2015 7:02am EDT Related: WORLD ,
GREECE
BRUSSELS/ATHENS
| BY ALASTAIR MACDONALD AND LEFTERIS PAPADIMAS
Euro zone
finance ministers have agreed to lend Greece up to 86 billion euros ($96
billion) after Greek lawmakers accepted their stiff conditions despite a revolt
by supporters of leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras.
Assuming
approval by the German and other parliaments, 13 billion euros should be in Athens next Thursday to
pay pressing bills and a further 10 billion will be set aside at the European
Stability Mechanism, earmarked to bolster Greek banks' capital.
In all,
euro zone governments will lend 26 billion euros in a first tranche of the
bailout before reviewing Greece 's
compliance with their conditions in October.
One
remaining uncertainty - aside from Tsipras' ability to deliver sweeping budget
cuts and privatizations opposed by many of his own party - is the role of the
International Monetary Fund. After backing two previous bailouts, the IMF
renewed its call for the Europeans to grant Athens debt relief - a bone of contention
between the Eurogroup and the Washington-based Fund.
Managing
Director Christine Lagarde told the Eurogroup by telephone that she could not
commit until the IMF board reviewed the situation in the autumn. Officials said
the Fund needed more assurances and detail on Greek reforms, notably to
pensions, and steps to persuade it that Greece 's debt burden was
sustainable.
But after
deadlock since January that ravaged the already weak Greek economy and ended in
a dramatic U-turn a month ago by the anti-austerity leftist government to avert
Athens ' expulsion from the euro, there was a
cautious sense of optimism among ministers gathered in a Brussels deep in summer holiday languor.
"After
six months of very difficult negotiations with lots of ups and downs, we
finally have an agreement," Greek Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos told
reporters on Friday. His appointment by Tsipras six weeks ago in place of his
abrasive predecessor has been hailed by counterparts as a mark of a new Greek
"realism".
"After
the changes in the government and the crises that we had, the cooperation with
let's say the changed Greek government is very constructive, very well organized,"
Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutch minister who chaired the meeting, told
reporters.
DEBT BURDEN
Even
Germany's Wolfgang Schaeuble, who last month floated a Greek exit from the euro
as Tsipras hesitated to agree terms with fellow leaders, sounded upbeat, if
still wary of a new tone in Athens that caused an angry split in Tsipras'
leftist party, with nearly a third of Syriza lawmakers rebelling in parliament.
"We
will have to wait and see," said Schaeuble, who has become a hate-figure
for rigid austerity among Greeks tired of five years of soaring unemployment.
"This is an opportunity. But what is decisive is that Greece does
what it says it will do."
Schaeuble
was among numerous ministers who stressed they saw it as vital that the IMF
take part in the third bailout, as it has in two programs totalling 240 billion
euros since 2010.
Not only
would IMF lending reduce the amount needed from Europe - possibly by a sum
similar to the 16 billion euros the Fund had ready when the second bailout
program expired - but the IMF's reputation for rigor would reassure skeptical
parliaments and financial markets that conditions would be met.
Lagarde
said in a statement that Europe would need to provide "significant"
debt relief as a complement to reforms Athens is
trying to put Greece 's
finances on a sustainable path.
"I
remain firmly of the view that Greece ’s
debt has become unsustainable and that Greece cannot restore debt
sustainability solely through actions on its own," she said, highlighting
what has become a significant bone of contention with the European institutions
with which the IMF helped negotiate the new accord.
Led by Germany , euro zone governments have ruled out
taking a "haircut" to reduce the nominal principle of Greece 's debts
to them. But the Eurogroup said in its statement that it would consider longer
grace periods and repayment periods if Greece successfully met its loan
conditions by an October review.
Dijsselbloem
said it was still unclear that Greece
could not afford to service its debts but he was optimistic differences with
the IMF could be overcome. French Finance Minister Michel Sapin, among strong
supporters of helping Greece
stay in the euro zone, said that a consensus was emerging on the Greek debt.
Critics of
past bailouts argue they can create a downward spiral as governments pump money
out of the country to service foreign loans, choking domestic economic activity
that generates the tax revenues the state needs to pay its debts. EU officials
argue that Greece
is borrowing already on very favorable terms.
While the
broad outlines of the bailout agreement were set at a marathon, all-night
summit a month ago and further filled in by negotiators who concluded a draft
on Tuesday, euro zone ministers devoted some of their six-hour meeting to
detailing a plan to recapitalize Greek banks. These have been ravaged by the
uncertainty and by capital controls imposed in late June.
The
agreement foresees up to 25 billion euros being set aside for bank capital,
with 10 billion of that immediately and up to 15 billion by mid-November, after
officials conduct stress tests of the banks' requirements. Shares issued by
banks in return for capital are to be placed in a privatization fund.
After some
discussion in the Eurogroup, ministers decided that bank depositors would not
see funds confiscated as part of a "bail-in" of other creditors. EU
rules taking effect next year could have hit account holders but, Dijsselbloem
said, ministers felt that prospect would hamper stabilizing the banking system.
REVOLT IN ATHENS
After
debating through the night on Thursday, the Greek parliament gave its backing
to Tsipras' plans to legislate what creditors want, though he had to rely on
opposition votes after nearly a third of his own supporters rebelled, forcing
him to consider a confidence vote that could pave the way for early elections.
After
defeating conservatives in January, Tsipras remains hugely popular for standing
up to Germany
and he would be expected to win again, given an opposition in disarray.
A hardline
faction in his party effectively gave notice it might break away, raising the
prospect of Tsipras having to build a new, possibly unstable, coalition.
That could
mean further uncertainty in Greece
and in a wider euro zone economy which data on Friday showed still struggling
to meet even modest growth expectations.
EU leaders
say new measures to consolidate the euro zone mean threats to its survival are
much weaker than when it first was hit by the global debt crisis. But
German-inspired fiscal rigor despite continued high unemployment, especially
among the young, continues to fuel opposition to European integration.
Nonetheless,
Tsipras defended his abandonment of election promises he made to austerity:
"I do not regret my decision to compromise," he told the parliament
in Athens .
"We undertook the responsibility to stay alive over choosing
suicide."
($1 =
0.9001 euro)
(Additional
reporting by Robert-Jan Bartunek, Tom Koerkemeier, Barbara Lewis, Alexander
Saeedy, Julia Fioretti and Foo Yun Chee in Brussels, Toby Sterling in
Amsterdam, Deepa Babington, Karolina Tagaris Michele Kambas and George
Georgiopoulos in Athens, Noah Barkin in Berlin and Tim Ahmann in Washington;
Writing by Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Giles Elgood and Susan Thomas)
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