Wednesday 18 July 2012


Greece in hard spot as debt payment looms and European doubts grow

Petros Giannakouris/AP - A Greek pensioner rests during a protest in Athens on July 12. Pensioners were demonstrating against the country’s austerity measures.
BERLIN — Greece’s new leaders have had only a month to confront their country’s dismal tangle of economic problems, but some in Europe think the troubled Mediterranean country is up against a hopeless task.
After months of political chaos and instability, Greece has fallen behind the requirements of a $160 billion bailout it received in March, and its ability to scrape together $3.8 billion to make an August debt payment to the European Central Bank is in question. Few officials or economists believe that Greece will be able to comply with the deadlines that are conditions for receiving more assistance. And in Germany, a key contributor to aid efforts, top officials have signaled new resolve in recent days that they will not commit more money to the cause.
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That leaves Greece in a difficult position, with an economy that some analysts say will shrink by 7 percent this year — far worse than the 4.2 percent expected just months ago when the bailout agreement was inked. Greece’s new prime minister, Antonis Samaras, has said he will hold to the terms of the bailout, but his allies have signaled doubts about whether that will happen.
“It is very difficult, almost impossible,” to make $14 billion in cuts in 2013 and 2014, the head of the Socialist party, Evangelos Venizelos, told Greece’s Vima radio Tuesday. Greek leaders would like more time to meet their financial targets, a change that would probably require Europe to put up more money to support them in the meantime.
But German officials have said they will not send any new money to Greece as long as the government does not have a track record of successfully implementing the overhauls that international lenders wrote into the bailout this year. That track record could take a year to build, the Germans say, and Greek governments have struggled for more than two years to make fundamental changes to the way their economy is run. With new signs that global growth is slowing, recovery may be even more difficult.
Progress lags
Around election season this year — which lasted from April until June because the initial May vote failed to produce a government — little work on economic overhauls took place, Greek and international officials say. After the May election, the already-slow work of privatizing state-owned assets was put on hold for a month. And a June income tax deadline that fell days before the second parliamentary election was rescheduled for July.
“The tax machine doesn’t do its best at a time of electoral uncertainty,” said George Pagoulatos, an economist who was an adviser to former prime minister Lucas Papademos.
Germany has little sympathy.
Living up to the terms of the bailout “is the necessary precondition for further cooperation,” Steffen Seibert, the spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel, told reporters last week.
Before the June elections, Samaras pledged to renegotiate the terms of the bailout with the international group of creditors that now keeps permanent watch over Greece’s finances. But European officials have dashed his hopes of significant changes.
 
tarquinis1
12:44 PM EDT
International finance is a complicated subject, granted. But as a simple reader of the press, I fail to see how, absent a fiscal and political union, a hard money monetary union with a central bank, can ever succeed.

Especially since the Greeks are not only notorious but renowned for cheating tax assessments. Yes, there are some tax cheat everywhere, but the wealthy in Greece consider it their personal prerogative. Me above all, first, last, and always.
cwals99
12:33 PM EDT
These articles on the Greek debt crisis always fail to state Germany's part in the crisis. It was German and US banks that colluded with these PIIGS finance ministers in using fraudulent financial instruments to hide sovereign debt, allowing these countries to borrow what it knew to be more debt then could be paid. It is the same thing done to subprime mortgagee's who were led to believe that it all would be manageable. The purpose for the conspiracy was to allow German markets to sell goods, which it did to great profit.......now they must face the music by writing off all the debt.....as they should!
ahashburn
9:28 AM EDT
Germany needs to stand firm otherwise Greece will never change its ways.

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