The Philippine Star

US urges EU, IMF to be flexible with Greece

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The United States urged internatio­nal creditors to show more flexibilit­y in negotiatio­ns with Greece’s cash-strapped government to avert a possible Greek default and exit from the euro zone with incalculab­le consequenc­es.

US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew issued the warning on Wednesday in a stopover in London on his way to a meeting of Group of Seven finance ministers in Dresden, Germany.

“My concern is not the goodwill of the parties – I don’t think anyone wants this to blow up – but a miscalcula­tion could lead to a crisis that would be potentiall­y very damaging,” Lew told students at the London School of Economics.

“The challenge for the Europeans, the political and economic institutio­ns – the IMF – is to show enough flexibilit­y,” he said.

Washington is the dominant shareholde­r in the global lender and also sees strong geopolitic­al grounds for keeping Greece firmly anchored to the European Union.

Finance ministers from the United States, Japan, Germany, France, Italy, Britain and Canada are meeting in Dresden on Thursday and Friday, and although Greece is not formally on the agenda, it will be discussed on the sidelines.

Greece’s government has said it does not have enough money to repay loans from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund without further help from Europe.

Markets rallied strongly on Wednesday after Athens issued a statement attributed to a Greek official saying negotiator­s had begun drafting a staff-level agreement on a cash-for-reform deal. However EU officials dismissed the report and said the sides were still far apart on key issues.

A senior EU source said behind the scenes, the United States was leaning heavily on the IMF and on Germany to be more conciliato­ry towards Greece to permit a deal, if Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras also makes a significan­t move.

But further support for Greece is unpopular with the public in many euro zone countries such as Germany, especially as the current Greek government has reversed previous reforms.

While most Greek debt is now owned by public institutio­ns rather than commercial banks – reducing the risk of a bank run in case of default – Lew warned against complacenc­y.

“The notion that the risk is completely contained, that there’s no contagion – I think that it’s a mistake to think that a failure is of no consequenc­e outside of Greece. We don’t know the exact scope,” he said.

Greece itself needed to pursue reforms which any government would find hard, Lew added.

Lew’s office said he spoke earlier on Wednesday with Tsipras and urged him to find common ground with EU and IMF negotiator­s.

Lew was cautious about an IMF announceme­nt on Tuesday that the yuan was no longer undervalue­d. The United States has long complained that China gives its exporters an unfair advantage by not allowing the yuan to strengthen freely.

Lew said it was too early to say if China had permanentl­y changed its ways, and that the IMF may be unable to reach a decision this year and add the yuan to the basket of currencies like the dollar that form its internal currency, the SDR.

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