Kathimerini English

Stournaras reiterates credit line need

Government keeps trying to nix BoG chief’s demand that would put an end to its ‘clean exit’ narrative

- BY EIRINI CHRYSOLORA

The government­appears determined to push its confrontat­ion with Bank of Greece Governor Yannis Stournaras to the limit. Yesterday it continued putting pressure on him at a central bank general meeting, in reaction to the former finance minister’s new warning on market risks and his reiteratin­g the proposal for a precaution­ary line of credit after August.

Stournaras said the credit line has to be examined as a supplement to the so-called cash buffer, especially if market conditions are adverse. He added that such a prospect “should not be dramatized, as the European mechanisms were created to be used when needed.”

However, the credit line is not acceptable for the government as it entails conditions and monitoring, as opposed to the narrative of a “clean exit.” Therefore, the General Secretary for Fiscal Policy Frangiskos Koutentaki­s, speaking as representa­tive of the state as the bank’s stakeholde­r, stated that “the effort for a smooth exit is significan­tly hampered when the country’s central bank disputes the sufficienc­y of the agreed procedure and reiterates the demand for a ‘precaution­ary support program.’”

Koutentaki­s added that the government and its creditors have agreed on the cash buffer and noted that Stournaras’s proposal, “regardless of intentions, objectivel­y creates doubts about the prospects of the Greek economy” and increases uncertaint­y. For these reasons, he said, “I express disagreeme­nt with the proposal.” A similar interventi­on came from Hellenic Petroleum chief executive Grigoris Stergiouli­s.

In his speech, Stournaras cited the recent unrest on markets and stressed that such phenomena “have a greater effect on countries with a weak credit rating and less robust economy, which saw their state bond yields increase signifi- cantly.” He also reminded the meeting of the warning by European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi, who at last week’s Eurogroup said that “the return of the Greek state to the markets should take place with cautious steps,” an interventi­on that had drawn a strong reaction from Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos.

Stournaras predicted in his report presented yesterday that growth this year will amount to 2.4 percent, against a European Commission projection for 2.5 percent.

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