Wednesday, June 24, 2015

PM Tsipras Says Greek Creditors Didn’t Accept Reform Plan

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (Reuters / Paul Hanna)


Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said the international creditors didn’t accept the new Greek proposals prior to another round of negotiations on Wednesday. Fears are escalating Greece could default and leave the eurozone.
In his official Twitter account Tsipras said the international creditors have never been so persistent in rejecting reform plans, neither in Ireland nor in Portugal. This stance means they either don’t want an agreement or serve specific interests in Greece, he said.

RT.com reports:
Leading negotiators including IMF chief Christine Lagarde say a debt deal should not be expected until the end of the month, not at this week’s meetings.
The finance ministers of the 19 eurozone countries are to hold talks on Wednesday to sort out the details of the new Greek proposals. Tsipras will also meet ECB President Mario Draghi, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker on Wednesday to try to strike a deal before the June 30 deadline to repay about €1.6 billion of IMF debt.
A broader meeting of all 28 EU members is scheduled for Thursday.
European stocks fell on the Tsipras statement. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index was down 0.5 percent to 396.69 at 13:08pm MSK. The Greek ASE Index fell 3.1 percent, ending its four-day upward trend, and is the biggest drop among Western European markets.
On Monday Tsipras offered a new package of proposals that focuses on tax increases on Greek firms and wealthy individuals, which is expected to help the country meet its budget targets.
Several dozen protesters gathered in Trafalgar Square in London on Tuesday in solidarity with Greece.Similar protests took place in Lisbon and Athens earlier this week.
Greece and its international creditors have been stuck in tough negotiations over the country’s multibillion euro debt for five months. Tsipras’ leftist Syriza party came to power aiming to end austerity measures, while the troika of international lenders insists the Athens should cut its spending and comply with their budget requirements.
The creditors want Athens to hit a primary surplus target of 1 percent of annual GDP by the end of the 2015 in the hope of achieving a 2 percent target in 2016 and 3 percent in 2017.

Greece's Tsipras, Creditors Struggle To Bridge Debt Gaps


Reuters reports International creditors demanded sweeping changes to Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' tax and reform proposals on Wednesday, adding fresh uncertainty to talks aimed at unlocking aid to avert a debt default next week.
Sources close to the negotiations said the creditors had presented counter-proposals covering an array of differences on sensitive issues, hours before euro zone finance ministers were due to convene (1700 GMT) to try to approve an agreement.
Before flying to Brussels, Tsipras attacked the position of "certain" creditors - a swipe at the International Monetary Fund - as strange since he said they had rejected fiscal measures Athens put forward to plug a budget gap.
"This odd stance seems to indicate that either there is no interest in an agreement or that special interests are being backed," the leftist premier tweeted.
Financial markets reacted nervously, with investors rushing into safe-haven German bonds and the euro suffering a brief sell-off. European shares dropped and U.S. stocks opened lower.
A European Union official insisted the talks had not broken down and said the exchange of different proposals was a normal part of the negotiation. But a Greek official said the lenders' five page counter-proposal - full of crossings-out and underlining in red ink - differed little from their initial June 3 offer and took scant account of Athens' document.
In Athens, an official in Tsipras' Syriza party said a state minister had branded the latest proposals "absurd" at a meeting of the party's political committee.
The talks were especially fraught because there is so little time left to reach a deal before Greece has to make a repayment to the IMF on June 30, the day its current bailout expires.
If Greece misses that payment and is declared in default to the IMF, it could trigger a bank run, capital controls and an eventual Greek exit from the euro zone, showing that membership of the currency is not irrevocable as its founders intended.
Among the many unresolved issues were labour laws, collective bargaining, pension reform, public sector wages, opening up closed professions, investment as well as value-added tax and corporate income tax.
Also in dispute were Tsipras' demands for debt relief, which euro zone partners do not want to address at this stage.
BARGAINING PROCESS
"Of course we want changes and they don't, and this is part of the bargaining process, albeit less effective when done publicly," a senior official from one of the creditors said.
Several sources said International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde was taking the hardest line against the Greek proposals on the table.
Tsipras met Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and the heads of the IMF, the European Central Bank, the Eurogroup of finance ministers and the euro zone's rescue fund to try to bridge the gaps.
Looking tense, he was driven into Commission headquarters through an underground garage to avoid the usual arrival statements, and given only a perfunctory handshake by Juncker before plunging into the meeting.
An official close to the creditors said in mid-afternoon the outcome of the negotiations remained up in the air.
"It is still very uncertain. We do not yet have a deal," the official said when asked if the talks had made progress.
All 28 EU leaders will be in Brussels on Thursday and Friday for a regular summit, allowing more time to wrangle over Greece on the sidelines if there is no solution on Wednesday.
Officials said the IMF was most concerned about the balance of the package, too heavily skewed towards tax increases that could further weaken the Greek economy and prove hard to collect, rather than structural reforms.
"If you ask the question 'Is this enough for the IMF to disburse?', I suspect it's not enough," one official said.
Hardline German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble's spokesman said there was a long way to go before an agreement.
A senior German official said Berlin could not imagine clinching an aid-for-reform deal without the IMF, which was needed not only for its funds but also its expertise.
The Greek proposals featured a series of tax hikes and higher contributions to pensions to meet budget targets. The IMF wants to see more savings achieved through budget cuts.
Greece will have to put the agreed measures through its parliament by Monday so that some other euro zone parliaments can endorse the deal and unblock aid funds.
Athens must repay 1.6 billion euros to the IMF next Tuesday. EU officials said the only way to fund that was for euro zone governments to hand over nearly 2 billion euros in profits from ECB holdings of Greek government bonds purchased in 2011-12.
EMERGENCY HELP
To keep Greek banks afloat, the ECB increased its emergency liquidity ceiling again on Tuesday. ECB sources have said the lifeline will be extended daily as long as there is a chance of a deal by end-June.
The more concessions Tsipras makes, the more resistance he will face in parliament within his leftist Syriza party and on the streets, where a series of recent protests, some organised with Syriza's support, have underlined public opposition to yet more belt-tightening.
"There are four people in my household, and we are living on 600 euros a month. Where else does that happen?" said 59-year-old Antonia Methoniou, a cancer patient who took early retirement for health reasons.
The IMF says Greece will need either some form of debt restructuring or further loans to make its finances sustainable.
But euro zone officials insisted that the creditors would not discuss any debt restructuring until after Greece implements the remainder of its bailout programme, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel has ruled out any "haircut" or debt write-off.
This will add to the difficulty of getting parliamentary approval in Athens, notably from the nationalist Independent Greeks, whose support Tsipras needs for a majority.
They also reject moves to scrap VAT exemptions enjoyed by some Greek islands.
"I could not vote for such a measure, nor, obviously, could I participate in a government violating a line on which we received a mandate from the Greek people," party leader Panos Kammenos tweeted on Tuesday.
But Economy Minister George Stathakis said he was confident parliament would back a deal before June 30: "I think this balanced deal is defensible to Syriza, and in Greek society too."  

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