Kathimerini English

Gov’t: IMF spring meetings pivotal

Athens says it won’t implement new measures unless debt relief is on the table

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The spring meetings of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund on April 2023 in Washington will, the government believes, be pivotal to the formulatio­n of the key Greek demand for medium-term debt relief measures.

“Consultati­ons will take place [in Washington] on medium-term measures for the Greek debt between all the parties involved,” government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopou­los said yesterday.

The government has been eager to attach a compromise deal – to complete the second review of Greece’s third bailout – to debt relief, which the IMF has set – along with the demand for further fiscals measures – as a preconditi­on to join the Greek program.

Echoing Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, Minister of State Nikos Pappas said yesterday that the govern- ment will not implement the measures it has agreed to for 2019 and 2020 unless there are debt relief measures.

“The measures for 2019 and 2020 were put on the table because some countries insisted that the IMF should remain part of the Greek program,” he said. If, Pappas added, the IMF’s demand for debt relief is not met and it leaves the program, then there is no reason to imple- ment the additional measures.

Faced with increasing dissent from within its own ranks and lagging in the polls, the leftist-led coalition has made debt relief a central pillar of its economic recovery narrative, as it hopes it could sweeten the pill of further spending cuts. According to this narrative, debt relief will pave the way for Greece’s inclusion in the European Central Bank’s quantitati­ve easing program.

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