Cape Argus

Greece ‘hurdles’ remain despite deal

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BRUSSELS: Eurozone finance officials were struggling yesterday to find a way of keeping Greece from defaulting on debt repayments to the ECB next week, with up to six options on the table but none that is problem-free.

Greece needs €3.5 billion by Monday to redeem its maturing credit from the European Central Bank. Before this is paid, however, Athens has to settle an overdue payment to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund of more than €2bn.

Overall, Greece needs €7bn in July and another €5bn by mid-August, its official creditors estimate.

“It’s full of traps and snares,” the chairman of eurozone finance ministers Jeroen Dijsselblo­em said on entering talks of the European Union’s 28 finance ministers.

“We’re looking at all the instrument­s and funds that we could use and all of them seem to have disadvanta­ges or impossibil­ities or legal objections so we’re still working on it,” he said.

Experts have come up with six options for such bridge financing, Finnish finance minister Alexander Stubb said, until Greece negotiates a full third bailout of €86bn about five weeks from now.

Euro zone deputy finance ministers, meeting in what is called the Euro Working Group, will be discussing the options this week before making a recommenda­tion.

The options include bilateral loans to Greece, the disburseme­nt of profits made by the ECB on Greek bonds it bought during the crisis, and making use of the funds still available in a mini-bailout fund set up in 2010 – the European Financial Stability Mechanism (EFSM).

The last option, however, seemed the most problemati­c. To deploy any of the €13.2bn remaining in the EFSM, all 28 EU government­s would have to give their consent, because the fund is backed by the whole EU budget.

Britain, which refused to allow the EFSM fund to be used for Greece’s bailout in the past, restated its objections yesterday, calling the option a complete “non-starter”.

“The euro zone needs to foot its own bill,” British Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said.

EU officials had already made clear this week that they did not expect Britain to contribute to Greece and that Brussels would not press it to. That is not least because the EU executive is trying to avoid fuelling Euroscepti­c sentiment in the bloc’s second-biggest economy before a referendum that Prime Minister David Cameron has called on EU membership by 2017.

Britain is not alone in its refusal to help. Prague expressed a similar unwillingn­ess to contribute.

“The Czech Republic will not give any loan to Greece, nor does it want to guarantee any loans for Greece,” Czech finance minister Andrej Babis said. “The decision of the euro zone is a political one. Everyone realises that Greece cannot manage this, no matter how hard it tries,” he said. – Reuters

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