Kathimerini English

Athens waits for lenders’ move

After IMF board fails to provide spark, coalition hopes Europeans will take initiative to wrap up review

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Athens is hoping that its European lenders come up with a way to overcome the impasse in its bailout review after a meeting of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s executive board on Monday left little room for encouragem­ent about a swift conclusion.

Although the IMF board did not take a clear position regarding the Fund’s participat­ion in the Greek program, its demand for more measures did not inspire hope in Athens that an agreement with the institutio­ns might be around the corner.

“The Fund cannot on the one hand say that the country does not need more austerity and insist on lower primary surplus targets but on the other ask for the legislatio­n of a lower taxfree threshold and new cuts to pensions,” government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopou­los said during a regular press briefing. “This is a completely contradict­ory line.”

Tzanakopou­los said he is certain there will be moves on all sides in the coming days to bridge the difference­s between the lenders and between the institutio­ns and Greece.

Government sources said that Athens is not thinking of taking the initiative itself as this would probably be fruitless. Instead, it hopes that one of the institutio­ns will make a move as this would mean that some common ground will have been establishe­d earlier.

“The Greek government can discuss and agree to whatever as long as it is sustainabl­e in its entirety and leads to Greece’s inclusion in the European Central Bank’s QE program,” said Tzanakopou­los.

New Democracy stepped up its calls for the government to abandon the change in social security contributi­ons for the self-employed. Conservati­ve leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis re- peated his call for tax cuts, a message the party believes is resonating with the middle class.

An opinion poll by Rass for the iefimerida.gr news website published yesterday gave New Democracy a strong lead over SYRIZA. The conservati­ves garnered 28.6 percent, 11.8 percentage points ahead of the leftists, whose support reached 16.8 percent.

New Democracy also continued to ask for more details about a recent trip to Paris by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, where he met with representa­tives of L’Oreal and Rothschild & Co investment bank.

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