Fri Dec 11,
2015 8:34pm GMT Related: BUSINESS
Reuters
The reforms
relate to a new privatisation fund, a shake-up of the power sector, and how to
open up the market for non-performing loans. Parliament will vote on the bill
next week, Tsakalotos said.
The two
sides reached agreement on the structure of the new privatisation fund whose
revenues will be used to boost investment and pay down the national debt, as
demanded by Germany
and other creditors.
"The
new fund will have a supervisory board which will be appointed by both the
government and the lenders," a government official told Reuters.
The board
will name the management of the new fund which will consist of Greece 's
current privatisation fund (HRADF), the bank rescue fund (HFSF), real estate
assets and state holdings in public utilities, the official said.
Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras' leftist government wants to speed up negotiations and
open the way for talks on debt relief, seeking urgently to convince Greeks that
their sacrifices will be rewarded.
MORE
REFORMS
Greece and
its lenders also agreed that the state will take a stake of at least 51 percent
in power grid operator (ADMIE), which is now fully owned by the dominant power
utility PPC (DEHr.AT). The rest will be privatised, an Energy Ministry official
said. PPC itself is 51 percent state-owned.
"We
are already achieving significant victories in this hard negotiation with our
lenders like the one we achieved yesterday by keeping ADMIE in state
hands," Tsipras told parliament.
A 20
percent stake in the grid operator will be sold to a private investor and 29
percent will be floated on the Athens
stock exchange, the Energy Ministry official said.
"We
are open and we will try to have a European electricity transmission operator
also participating as a minority shareholder," the official said.
ADMIE has a
book value of about 900 million euros ($985 million) and Greece will
appoint an independent valuer to assess the price it has to pay PPC for the
majority stake. It was not clear how the cash-strapped government would pay.
But Athens
is still struggling to keep non-performing loans (NPLs) to small business and
consumers out of the clutches of 'vulture funds' that buy loan books of
distressed debt at a discount and try to recover the money.
Economy
Minister George Stathakis said the agreement for NPLs would open up the market
for loan transfers but excludes mortgages for primary homes, consumer loans and
those of small and medium enterprises for which there will be a regulatory
framework by Feb. 15.
The latest
reform bill is expected to be submitted to parliament on Saturday. The
government aims to secure parliament's approval on Tuesday to get the 1 billion
euro tranche by Dec. 18.
It will
then have to pass other reforms, including a major restructuring of the ailing
pension system, to conclude its first bailout review and open talks about debt
relief.
(Editing by
Ruth Pitchford)
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