Thid video from Reuters includes comments from my favorite Greek economist, Yanis Yaroufakis
Greek
coalition set to form 'within hours'
GREEK
political leaders last night were close to forming a government that
was expected to immediately seek a third bailout, according to likely
coalition partners
26
April, 2012
.
''Agreement
on a policy roadmap is the definitive point to form a government,''
Democratic Left leader Fotis Kouvelis said after meeting Pasok leader
Evangelos Venizelos in Athens last night.
''The
process is speeding up. It is possible that in the next few hours, or
within the day, a government can be decided.''
As
Antonis Samaras, leader of Greece's New Democracy party, scrambled to
forge a coalition with the centre-left Pasok, officials admitted
their first task would be to renegotiate the €130 billion ($163
billion) bailout agreed to last month.
Senior
economic adviser Dimitrios Tsomocos said Mr Samaras intended to
''honour Greece's contractual obligations but will actively and
aggressively renegotiate the memorandum''.
Another
senior aide warned of a ''social explosion'' in Greece if the
bailout's terms were not relaxed.
Athens
has to reduce its budget deficit to below 3 per cent of gross
domestic product by 2014 and find another €11 billion in public
spending cuts from 2014 to 2016.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel has insisted Greece will have to meet
commitments made to international lenders. But her Foreign Minister,
Guido Westerwelle, said he could ''well imagine talking again about
timelines''.
New
Democracy won 129 of the 300 seats in Sunday's election, including a
bonus 50 seats for coming first. Mr Samaras has three days to form a
ruling alliance with the mainstream socialists of Pasok (33 seats)
and the Democratic Left.
Democratic Left, which has 17 seats, has
demanded commitment to staying in the euro as well as ''gradual
disengagement'' from the austerity measures.
Greek
President Carolos Papoulias has warned Mr Samaras that ''the country
cannot remain ungoverned for even an hour''.
A
rally in financial markets at the result of Greece's election was
short-lived, amid fears that Europe's worsening debt crisis might
engulf Spain and Italy.
''The
Greek election result averts the most immediately alarming scenarios
for the eurozone but makes no fundamental change in the medium-term
outlook,'' said Stephen Lewis, of Monument Securities.
Graham
Turner, of GFC Economics, said about Greece: ''There will be another
election within six months, when Syriza [the main anti-bailout party]
is widely expected to take control.
''However,
whoever governs Greece will be faced with a similar compelling logic.
''A
second debt restructuring will be required to keep Greece within the
single currency,'' he said.
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