Greece running out of time to avoid default, leaders concede
Until
Friday EU executives have refused to countenance the prospect of
default and the issue has not been discussed at any official level
12
June, 2015
Greece
has less than a week to strike a deal with its eurozone creditors to
avoid defaulting on its massive debts and perhaps being kicked out of
the single currency area, with German leaders and top European Union
officials now conceding that default is the likeliest outcome.
Negotiations
between the leftist government in Athens and its creditors are now at
their lowest ebb since Alexis Tsipras became Greek prime minister in
January.
Angela
Merkel, the German chancellor, and Jean-Claude Juncker, the president
of the European commission, said on Friday that talks with Greece
would carry on ahead of next Thursday’s key meeting of eurozone
finance ministers in Luxembourg. That meeting is now viewed as the
deadline for a decision on Greece’s fate.
Merkel
was said to have resigned herself to a Greek default, and at a
meeting on Thursday night in Bratislava, eurocrats preparing for the
Luxembourg talks included the default scenario in their discussions
for the first time.
Until
Friday EU executives have refused to countenance the prospect of
default and the issue has not been discussed at any official level
Standard
& Poor’s lowered the rating of Greece’s biggest four banks on
Friday, two days after cutting its already deep-junk rating for Greek
bonds.
Alpha
Bank, Eurobank, the National Bank of Greece and Piraeus Bank saw
their rating drop from CCC+ to CCC, S&P said in a statement.
“The
downgrade reflects our view that Greek banks will likely default
within the next 12 months in the absence of an agreement between the
Greek government and its official creditors ,” the ratings agency
said.
According
to German media reports on Friday, Berlin has also begun contingency
planning for Greek default scenarios. The plans were said to include
the introduction of capital controls in Greece, closure of the banks,
and the government’s issuing of IOUs to finance its public sector.
There
is no exit plan for any country to leave the euro, but economists
have suggested that such IOUs could then become a pseudo-currency,
but they would circulate only within Greece. They would be impossible
to use for international trade.
“The
chancellor now knows that there is not enough time left,” one of
Merkel’s aides told German mass-circulation newspaper Bild-Zeitung.
Jeroen
Dijsselbloem, the Dutch finance minister who will chair next week’s
Luxembourg meeting, delivered an ultimatum to Athens, warning it
would be left “alone” if it did not meet the creditors’ terms
for securing remaining bailout funds.
On
Friday night, however, Greece was still refusing to back down. In a
policy document leaked to the Greek press, the Tsipras government
once again called for a debt restructuring and ruled out pension cuts
or labour market reforms that would bring wage decreases.
It
attacked the decision of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to
walk out of negotiations on Thursday – arguing that it represented
pressure not on Greece, but on Germany. The IMF said the gap between
the two sides was too wide and there had been no progress in talks.
While
Juncker said that “technical” talks would continue – meaning
negotiations between experts from both sides in the so-called
Brussels Group – the Greek statement said the technical talks were
over. Greece insisted that any further negotiations would only take
place at a higher “political” level.
The
current Greek bailout, with €7.2bn remaining to be disbursed,
expires on 30 June unless an extension can be agreed. An extension
would come with the same strings attached that Greece has so far
rejected.
Greece
has to repay the IMF €1.6bn by that date. It also has to redeem
bonds at the European Central Bank to the tune of €6.7bn next month
and in August. It also has a €1.7bn a month bill to pay for civil
servants’ salaries and pensions.
Without
a last-gasp breakthrough – of which there is no sign – Greece
will be unable to make those payments.
“It’s
foremost in the Greeks’ interests to get that agreement. The way
things are now, it’s not going anywhere,” said Dijsselbloem. “If
the Greek government can’t accept the fact that there are no easy
solutions and that the difficult decisions just must be made, it is
alone. We can’t help Greece if Greece doesn’t want to help itself
... They have to come with serious proposals.”
The
negotiations have gone from bad to worse in the past 10 days and are
now at stalemate. Tsipras refuses to table proposals which would
satisfy his creditors by agreeing to pension cuts and tax increases
and is insisting on a form of debt writedown, which is anathema to
the Germans.
The
eurozone, in turn, has reverted to the pre-Tsipras crisis practices
over the past five years of serving up ultimatums and policy diktats
to the Greeks.
As
if anticipating a blame game in the event of a Greek default, senior
German officials told Bild: “No one will be able to say we didn’t
try our utmost.”
But
Juncker said on Friday that there would be more “technical” talks
with the Greeks and then “political” negotiations. Repeating her
mantra of recent weeks on Greece and on Britain in Europe, Merkel
said: “Where there’s a will, there’s a way ... It’s right
that we keep talking.”
If
there was any chance of saving the situation, Tsipras would have to
make concessions, according to eurozone leaders.
“They
can come with alternatives but then they have to be proper,” said
Dijsselbloem. “As long as we don’t have those, it’s going to be
very difficult.”
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