Mixed messages on third Greek bailout
talks
People carrying goods wait at a bus stop in Athens' commercial
district March 2, 2015.
(Reuters) - Euro zone countries are discussing a third
bailout forGreece worth 30 billion to 50 billion euros, Spain's economyminister
said on Monday, but EU officials said there were no such talks.
Speaking
at an event in Pamplona, northern Spain, EconomyMinister Luis de
Guindos said the new rescue plan would set more flexible conditions for Greece,
which had no alternative other than European support.
But
the spokeswoman for Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who chairs theeuro zone finance
ministers' group, said there was no discussion of a third bailout and senior euro
zone officials concurred.
"Euro
zone finance ministers are not discussing a third bailout,"
spokeswoman Simone Boitelle said.
Greek
leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras used a televised address on Friday to
deny his country would need another international program.
Greece has
acute and immediate funding problems to overcome, despite the four-month
extension to its existing bailout it negotiated with the euro zone last
month. To win that, Tsipras had to give up on key pledges made during his
election campaign.
The
extension averted a banking meltdown. But Greece still faces a steep decline in
revenues and is expected to run out of cash by the end of March, possibly
sooner.
The
new government in Athens sought to assure it can cover its funding needs this
month, including repaying a 1.5-billion- euro loan to the International
Monetary Fund.
"We
are confident that the repayments will be made in full, particularly to the
IMF, and there will be liquidity to get us through the end of the four-month
period," Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said during a late-night
talk show on Greek TV. "March is sorted."
Most
of Greece's options appear to have been shut off, for now at least.
A
request for 1.9 billion euros in profits the European Central Bank made on
buying Greek bonds will not be granted until Greece has completed
promised reforms.
Athens
has also sought permission to issue more short-term treasury bills, having
reached a cap of 15 billion euros set by its lenders. The euro zone has
made clear it does not want to see that limit lifted.
Dutch
Finance Minister Dijsselbloem offered a potential escape route.
He
told the Financial Times that Greece's international creditors could pay part
of the 7.2 billion euros remaining in its bailout pot as early as this month if
Athens started enacting necessary reforms.
"There
are elements that you can start doing today. If you do that, then somewhere in
March, maybe there can be a first disbursement. But that would require progress
and not just intentions," Dijsselbloem was quoted as saying.
Greece is
due to receive the 7.2 billion euros in remaining EU/IMF bailout funds if it
successfully completes the program. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble
said last week no further aid would be paid out until Athens fulfilled all the
conditions.
Berlin
has also ruled out any debt write-down.
Longer-term,
EU officials say Greece - frozen out of the bond market and unable to
borrow - will inevitably need a third support program to buy time to get back
on its feet.
BLAME
GAME
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel said Greece needed to give more details on
the reforms it promised in return for the extension of its aid program.
Varoufakis,
who will outline details of reforms at the next meeting of euro zone finance
ministers on March 9, said he would present the Eurogroup with six reforms to
see which of those can be implemented immediately.
Markets
are confident Greece will not bomb out of the euro zone, given
that Tsipras's government has negotiated a bailout extension and backed off
major election campaign pledges such as ending austerity and renegotiating its
debt pile.
But
diplomats talk of impatience with the mixed messages coming from the new
government about its economic reform intentions and its finger-pointing at
European partners.
The
European Commission said it was seeking to maintain EU unity after Tsipras
accusedSpain and Portugal of
conspiring against it, triggering complaints from Madrid and Lisbon.
Tsipras
accused them of leading a conservative conspiracy to topple his anti-austerity
government because they feared the rise of the left in their own countries.
"By
European standards, this was very unusual foul play. We don't do that in the
Eurogroup, that's not appropriate," a spokesman for Schaeuble told a news
conference in Berlin.
Countries
that had to implement their own reforms in return for outside help, such
asIreland, Portugal and Spain, have joined Germany in
arguing Greece should not get preferential treatment.
(Additional
reporting by Jan Strupczewski in Brussels and Karolina
Tagaris and Angeliki Koutantou in Athens; Writing by Mike Peacock; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Cynthia Osterman)
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