The country, however, strongly denied a report that it was scheduled to turn to the international lender as soon as April and said all options for getting support were still open.
“This [report] is ridiculous,” Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou told Reuters. “We have said from the beginning that all options are open ... we are not any closer now to the IMF [than before]. These reports are just plain silly.”
Market concerns that it may prove impossible to construct a euro zone financial safety net for the currency area’s most heavily indebted member due to German reluctance sent the euro lower and hit Greek bank shares and bonds.
Prime Minister George Papandreou told the European Parliament that draconian austerity measures announced by his socialist government showed it was committed to the stability of the euro and would carry out necessary structural reforms.
“But if we keep borrowing at very high rates, and this is the challenge we have, we cannot sustain the deficit reduction that these hard measures aim to achieve,” he told a committee of the EU legislature.
Strikes in Greece over tax reform, gas station owners walk off Greek unemployment rose to 10.3 percent in the fourth quarter of 2009, the country’s statistics agency said Thursday - - the highest since 2005 and the largest jump in 11 years. Unemployment had stood at 7.9 percent in the fourth quarter of the previous year, the statistics agency said. This quarter’s rate is the highest since the fourth quarter of 2004, when unemployment stood at 10.4 percent. The figures come as Greece is under intense pressure from its European Union partners to reduce its massive budget deficit from 12.7 percent to 8.7 percent of gross domestic product. It has announced a tough austerity program slashing civil servants’ pay, freezing pensions and hiking taxes - - measures which have led to a backlash from labor unions, who have responded with a series of strikes. Taxi drivers and gas station owners were the latest to walk off the job, staging a 24-hour strike Thursday to protest an overhaul of tax laws that will force them, as well as kiosk owners and street fruit and vegetable vendors, to give customers receipts in an effort to fight tax evasion. The center-left government is due later Thursday to finalize the proposed legislation, which will increase the burden on the rich, landowners and the powerful Orthodox Church. Athens AP |
The premium investors charge for holding Greek debt rather than benchmark German bonds rose as high as 319 basis points, meaning Athens would have to pay about 6.30 percent to borrow on capital markets, by far the highest yield in the euro zone. Economists say such rates would compound Greece’s problems in a year when it needs to borrow some 53 billion euros ($72.4 billion), 20 billion of it in refinancing between April 20 and end May.
Papandreou said Greece wanted a decision at an EU summit next week on a mechanism to provide financial support if needed, but stressed that Athens had not asked for money and would not default or leave the euro zone. He said he hoped such visible EU backing would force market rates down and make it unnecessary for Greece to go to the IMF.
“We have taken today measures that the IMF would have asked us to take. In fact, we are under an IMF program. However, we don’t have the facilities that the IMF could give,” he said.
Greece did not want to be in “a situation when we have the worst of the IMF and none of the advantages of the euro zone.”
talk tactical?
The Dow Jones Newswires report quoting a senior Greek official as saying Athens may apply for IMF financial aid early next month drove the euro down against the dollar.
Analysts said that raising the spectre of the first IMF intervention in the euro zone was mostly a tactic to increase pressure for agreement on European rescue mechanism.
“The IMF talk on the part of the Greek government is intended to push euro zone partners into making explicit the standby arrangement which seems to have been agreed upon at the European Council level, in the hope that such an announcement will push Greek government bond spreads to tolerable levels for Greece to proceed with borrowing,” said Michael Massourakis, head of economic research at Alpha Bank in Athens.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, facing massive public opposition to bailing out Greece ahead of a crucial regional election in May, has taken the hardest line against any rescue arrangement.
“A quick act of solidarity is definitely not the right answer,” she told parliament in Berlin on Wednesday, calling for radical changes to the EU treaty to make it possible to expel a serial deficit offender from the euro zone.
After initially ruling out any recourse to the International Monetary Fund inside the single currency bloc, German government sources have begun this week to say Berlin might not oppose a Greek recourse to the Washington-based global lender.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| BÜLENT KENEŞ | ![]() |
||
| If the judiciary can't call MİT to account for its deeds, then Parliament should | |||
| EKREM DUMANLI | ![]() |
||
| Beware! | |||
| GÖKHAN BACIK | ![]() |
||
| Partition of Syria among the Great Powers: The solution? | |||
| EMRE USLU | ![]() |
||
| MİT | |||
| CHARLOTTE MCPHERSON | ![]() |
||
| Every child matters | |||
| BERK ÇEKTİR | ![]() |
||
| New veterinary hospital regulations (1) | |||
| ŞAHİN ALPAY | ![]() |
||
| Systemic gaps in government authority in Turkey | |||
| MARKAR ESAYAN | ![]() |
||
| MİT crisis and old state | |||
| AMANDA PAUL | ![]() |
||
| Gas is cut while Europe freezes | |||
| ÖMER TAŞPINAR | ![]() |
||
| Time for Turkey to match words with deeds | |||
| FATMA DİŞLİ ZIBAK | ![]() |
||
| Unusual days for Turkey | |||
| YAVUZ BAYDAR | ![]() |
||
| Eclipse of the minds | |||
| MÜMTAZER TÜRKÖNE | ![]() |
||
| The Kurdish issue has divided the state | |||
| CUMALİ ÖNAL | ![]() |
||
| US, Israel will not attack Iran | |||
| DOĞU ERGİL | ![]() |
||
| ‘Religious youth’ | |||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||