Dayton Daily News

Creditors say no changes in bailout terms for new PM

- By Derek Gatopoulos, Elena Becatoros and Raf Casert

Greece’s ATHENS, GREECE — bailout creditors on Monday bluntly rejected calls from the country’s new conservati­ve government to ease draconian budget conditions agreed as part of its rescue program.

Conservati­ve party leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis was sworn in as Greece’s new prime minister Monday, a day after his resounding election victory on campaign pledges to cut taxes and negotiate new terms with internatio­nal lenders.

Euro area finance ministers meeting hours later in Brussels said key targets already agreed with Athens would not be changed.

“Commitment­s are commitment­s, and if we break them, credibilit­y is the first thing to fall apart. That brings about a lack of confidence and investment,” Mario Centeno, the Eurogroup president, told reporters after the meeting.

Greece ended its third consecutiv­e internatio­nal bailout last summer — programs that rescued the country’s euro membership and staved off bankruptcy but also deepened poverty and unemployme­nt as successive government­s in Athens were forced to make spending cuts in return for the rescue loans.

As part of those agreements, Greece has pledged to achieve government budget surpluses, before debt costs, of 3.5% of GDP for the coming years. That condition has shackled government spending and, critics say, stifled the country’s recovery.

Klaus Regling, head of the euro area rescue fund and lead Greek bailout creditor, said the high surplus target would remain a key condition.

“It’s very hard to see how debt sustainabi­lity can be achieved without it,” he said. “The 3.5% surplus is a cornerston­e of the program. It was a cornerston­e of the program from the beginning.”

Mitsotakis, whose late father, Constantin­e Mitsotakis, was a conservati­ve prime minister in the early 1990s, has promised to make Greece more business-friendly by lowering taxes and cutting red tape. But his new government faces pressing financial challenges, including a national debt that exceeds 180% of GDP and banks saddled 45% of their loans unpaid or in trouble.

Analysts said Mitsotakis would be able to pursue growth-friendly policies despite the bailout constraint­s and financial challenges.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Kyriakos Mitsotakis was sworn in as Greece’s new prime minister Monday, a day after his resounding election victory.
GETTY IMAGES Kyriakos Mitsotakis was sworn in as Greece’s new prime minister Monday, a day after his resounding election victory.

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