Kathimerini English

Gov’t, creditors fail to bridge gulf in talks

Energy, labor remain sticking points

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Attempts by Greek government officials to bridge a gulf in dragging negotiatio­ns with representa­tives of the country’s internatio­nal creditors failed to bear fruit yesterday, indicating that a breakthrou­gh in bailout talks may be unlikely until May.

A two-hour conversati­on, which took place during a teleconfer­ence yesterday between several Greek ministers and the mission chiefs to Greece, was tense, according to sources. Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos participat­ed in the call, along with Labor and Social Insurance Minister Effie Achtsioglo­u, Energy Minister Giorgos Stathakis and Alternate Finance Minister Giorgos Houliaraki­s.

A key point of contention was the issue of energy – Greece’s creditors are pushing for the full liberaliza­tion of the market. Bailout monitors repeated their calls for the sale of the Public Power Corporatio­n’s lignite and hydroelect­ric plants. According to sources, foreign officials were so insistent that Stathakis was forced to refer the matter to Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras.

Efforts will be made over the weekend to reach a compromise on the issue, with the Greek side keen to put off the privatizat­ion of PPC plants, a politicall­y contentiou­s reform, until a later date. The aim is for some common ground to be establishe­d ahead of a summit of eurozone finance ministers on Monday. Although Greece is on the official agenda of talks, no breakthrou­gh is expected. What the Greek delegation is hoping for is to get eurozone ministers’ “political” backing for certain thorny issues, chiefly relating to labor market reforms, on which the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has assumed a tough stance.

According to sources, the two sides failed to bridge their difference­s on labor reforms too yesterday, with bailout monitors continuing to insist that mass layoffs should be facilitate­d in the private sector while Greek officials want the revocation of collective bargaining laws.

One foreign official said the creditors are awaiting “strong reassuranc­es” from Tsakalotos on Monday otherwise bailout monitors will not return to Athens to pick up a stalled review.

Meanwhile, as speculatio­n grows that the IMF will end up backing Greece’s third internatio­nal bailout, conservati­ves in Congress are pushing US President Donald Trump to block the Fund from participat­ing in Greece’s third bailout, according to the Financial Times.

Conservati­ve Republican­s in Congress want Trump to take a hard line and oppose further IMF involvemen­t in Greece, the FT reported.

A bill introduced on Thursday by Bill Huizenga, a Michigan conserva- tive, calls for the Trump administra­tion to oppose any further IMF participat­ion in a Greek bailout. Should the US fail to achieve that aim, the bill would also require the US to oppose any broader IMF quota reforms until Greece had repaid all of its debts to the IMF. “The IMF is supposed to be a lender of last resort, not a fig leaf of first resort for eurozone members,” the FT cited Huizenga as saying.

 ??  ?? Constructi­on workers protest outside the Labor Ministry in central Athens, yesterday. Unionists demanded that the government take immediate measures to curb unemployme­nt in the sector which, they said, has hit the 80 percent mark.
Constructi­on workers protest outside the Labor Ministry in central Athens, yesterday. Unionists demanded that the government take immediate measures to curb unemployme­nt in the sector which, they said, has hit the 80 percent mark.

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