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Showing posts with label Greece. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greece. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

In Greece, Restlessness Amid a Push for Cuts

The following is an excerpt from an article in:


The New York Times
Tuesday, September 18, 2012

In Greece, Restlessness Amid a Push for Cuts

By LIZ ALDERMAN

ATHENS — Public opposition to austerity budgets deepened in Greece on Monday, with judges stopping work, doctors going on strike and public transport staff and schoolteachers planning action for later this week. The moves are a prelude to a general strike called by the country’s main labor unions for Sept. 26.

The protests are gaining steam even as Europe’s fears of a Greek exit from the euro zone seem to be subsiding. On Monday, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said she wanted Greece to stay in the euro union, reiterating what appears now to be her steadfast position after months of hesitating on the issue. “I think that everyone who is politically sensible will want that, too,” she said during a news conference in Berlin.

The Greek prime minister, Antonis Samaras, renewed efforts on Monday to come up with a tough new 11.5 billion euro ($15 billion) austerity package. The additional cuts are needed to meet the terms of Greece’s 130 billion euro bailout and to unlock a 31.5 billion euro loan installment that Athens hopes to receive in October to stay solvent.

Faced with rising discontent, Mr. Samaras has been asking Greece’s international creditors for more time to impose any new cuts, lest the economy, which contracted by 6.2 percent in the second quarter, sink further.

For more, visit www.nytimes.com.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Conciliatory Notes in Germany on Easing Greece's Burden


The following is an excerpt from an article in 



The New York Times
Thursday, August 23, 2012

Conciliatory Notes in Germany on Easing Greece's Burden

By MELISSA EDDY and JACK EWING

BERLIN — Bild, Germany’s most-read newspaper, has accused Greece of “making our euro kaput” and only a few days ago referred to the country as “a bottomless pit.”

On Wednesday, though, the paper featured a friendly chat with the man in charge of that bottomless pit: Antonis Samaras, the Greek prime minister, who pleaded during an interview for more time to repair his country’s shattered economy. The Bild reporter even inquired how Mr. Samaras was feeling after an eye operation.

Coming from a newspaper known for a keen understanding of what its 2.8 million readers want to hear, the shift in tone could be significant. It coincides with signals from members of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s inner circle this week that, within limits, Germany may no longer be so insistent that Greece stick to existing agreements on its finances.

“All that we want is a little breathing room to get the economy going and increase revenue,” Mr. Samaras told Bild, two days before his first trip to Berlin as head of government. “More time does not automatically mean more money.”

Some top officials in Ms. Merkel’s governing coalition continue to insist that Greece stick to agreements it has made to rein in its government finances. But others, including Guido Westerwelle, the foreign minister, and Michael Meister, the deputy leader of Ms. Merkel’s Christian Democratic party in Parliament, have indicated a willingness to extend the schedule for meeting the terms that international creditors imposed on Greece.

“It is essential that the government in Athens presents a credible plan to implement the measures,” Mr. Meister told the newspaper Handelsblatt on Wednesday. But if the government did, Mr. Meister said, “maximum flexibility” was possible.

The debate about Greece has intensified before a report to be issued next month on the country’s progress in attaining its fiscal goals. Officials have been hinting that parts of the report from the troika of international lenders — the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission and the European Central Bank — may be more positive than expected. But the debate is also pressuring euro zone leaders to acknowledge that the austerity program imposed on Greece by the troika has taken such a toll on living standards that it has become counterproductive.

Some members of Ms. Merkel’s government, including the finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, have continued to talk tough on Greece. Volker Kauder, head of the Christian Democrats in Parliament, said repeatedly this week that lawmakers were in no mood to grant concessions to Athens.

“The agreements stand,” Mr. Kauder said in remarks to the Passauer Neue Presse newspaper on Wednesday. “Only when agreements in Europe can be upheld, can we rebuild trust.”

The seemingly conflicting positions taken by key figures in the chancellor’s party may be designed to prepare the German public for a shift in policy. Hard-liners like Mr. Kauder are trying to remind the Greek public that Berlin remains steadfast in its demand for a major overhaul of the economy. The more conciliatory statements are designed to bring Germans around to the idea that granting Greece more time to meet its goals is essential to saving the euro and so, ultimately, is in their best interest.

For more, visit www.nytimes.com.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

A Second Greek Bailout Is Approved by Euro Zone Nations

Excerpt from an article in

The New York Times
Thursday, March 15, 2012

A Second Greek Bailout Is Approved by Euro Zone Nations

By STEPHEN CASTLE

LONDON — After months of tortuous and tense negotiations, a second bailout for Greece finally became a reality on Wednesday when euro zone nations formally approved the plan and authorized the release of the first multibillion-euro loan installment.

In a statement, Jean-Claude Juncker, who, as the president of the Eurogroup, leads the finance ministers of the 17 European Union members that use the euro, said the national governments had formally approved Greece’s second rescue, which is valued at 130 billion euros ($170 billion). “All required national and parliamentary procedures have been finalized,” he said.

Finance ministers gave their political seal of approval to the accord earlier in the week, but the announcement on Wednesday signified the end of negotiations that had provoked tensions between Greece and some of its creditors and that periodically had teetered close to failure.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Next Time, Greece May Need New Tactics

Excerpt from an article in

The New York Times
Saturday, March 10, 2012

Next Time, Greece May Need New Tactics

By LANDON THOMAS Jr.

LONDON The Greek government was able to legally strong-arm most of its private bondholders into accepting the debt reduction deal it completed Friday. But next time — and experts predict there will almost certainly be a next time — Greece might have much less leverage.

That’s because as a result of Friday’s deal, the bulk of Athens’s 260.2 billion euros ($341 billion) in remaining government debt will now be held by the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the individual European nations that have lent Greece money and contributed to the region’s bailout fund.

Politically, Greece would be hard-pressed to force debt losses on such a formidable international group, the way it did with the private banks and hedge funds that have just been forced to accept a 75 percent loss on their Greek bond holdings. Greece’s main creditors, in effect, are now foreign taxpayers — who are likely to be much less malleable than the private creditors if Greece needs to renegotiate its staggering debt load a year or two down the road.

“From now on, whatever happens in Greece, it will be a matter between Greece and the taxpayers of the rest of the euro area,” said Jacob F. Kirkegaard, an analyst at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

The final private creditor deal announced Friday was agreed to by nearly 86 percent of the bondholders; the number was expected to rise to 95 percent after Athens invoked a so-called collective action clause forcing others to join in. Without such a deal, Greece had strongly implied, it might default altogether, with no one getting paid. The outcome has enabled Greece to reduce its debt load by just over 100 billion euros, or about $132 billion.

Later in the day, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association ruled that the agreement was nonetheless a technical default by Greece — a ruling that will mean payouts on some insurance contracts, known as credit-default swaps, that various investors had taken out on the privately held Greek debt. Around $70 billion in default swaps on that debt are outstanding, although analysts expect the net payout to end up at only $3.2 billion or so.

Friday, March 9, 2012

ISDA Announces Greece 'Credit Event'

CNBC’s Steve Liesman, Kelly Evans, Bob Pisani & Maria Bartiromo discuss the ISDA announcement that Friday’s Greek bond swap constitutes a “credit event.”

To see the discussion, click the link below:

Greek Default

It’s official!  The Greek government has defaulted!

Probably not many folks are surprised, but it is now official.

For a video, click the link below: