Bailout disagreement

Published: Thursday | October 25, 2012 Comments 0
Peaceful protesters of Greece's austerity plan are seated before the landmark White Tower in June 2011. Greece and the European Central Bank disagree on the whether Greece has got an extension on its bailout programme. - File
Peaceful protesters of Greece's austerity plan are seated before the landmark White Tower in June 2011. Greece and the European Central Bank disagree on the whether Greece has got an extension on its bailout programme. - File

Greece: We got an extension; EU: No you didn't

Greece's Finance minister said the country has been granted a long-sought extension to meet the terms of its bailout programme — but the claim was swiftly shot down as "speculation" by the European Central Bank and lead lender Germany.

Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said the deal was struck as part of weeks-long negotiations with its international creditors over a euro13.5 billion (US$17.56 billion) package of new austerity measures for the next two years, required for continued emergency loan payments.

"What have we achieved today? We have achieved the extension," the minister told parliament. "If we had not been granted that extension, today we not only have needed to take measures worth euro13.5 billion euros, but euro18.5 billion (US$24 billion)."

He added: "We have not gone bankrupt because we still have funds remaining from the previous instalment."

One of the conditions of Greece's current euro240 billion bailout program is that it reforms the economy so the country can eventually return to the bond markets to raise money.

Greece has asked for a two-year extension on its adjustment program, till the end of 2016, so that it ease the impact of further austerity measures and labor market reforms.

In Berlin, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble bluntly dismissed Stournaras' statement as "speculation".

"I can't confirm this," he told reporters.

"As far as the Federal Finance Ministry and the German government are concerned, there are no new developments."

Schaeuble said creditors were still awaiting a report on Greece's progress by the so-called troika of debt inspectors, from the European Union, the ECB and International Monetary Fund, before any decisions would be made.

ECB President Mario Draghi also poured cold water on the Greek statements.

"The review is not finished yet," he said. "I understand progress has been made but that some parts need to be defined, and I don't know anything more than that. I cannot comment on these rumours."

- AP

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