A woman beggar walks by the Bank of Greece in central
Athens. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis
Euro zone finance ministers agreed a 130-billion-euro
rescue for Greece today to avert an imminent chaotic default
after forcing Athens to commit to unpopular cuts and private
bondholders to take bigger losses.
The complex deal wrought in overnight negotiations buys time
to stabilise the 17-nation currency bloc and strengthen its
financial firewalls, but it leaves deep doubts about Greece's
ability to recover and avoid default in the longer term.
After 13 hours of talks, ministers finalised measures to cut
Athens' debt to 120.5 percent of gross domestic product by
2020, a fraction above the target, securing a second rescue
in less than two years in time for a major bond repayment due
in March.
"We have reached a far-reaching agreement on Greece's new
programme and private sector involvement that would lead to a
significant debt reduction for Greece ... to secure Greece's
future in the euro area," Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs the
Eurogroup of finance ministers, told a news conference.
Greece will be placed under permanent surveillance by an
increased European presence on the ground, and it will have
to deposit funds to service its debt in a special account to
guarantee repayments.
The 5am deal was hailed as a step forward for Greece, but
experts warned that Athens will need more help to bring its
debts down to the level envisaged in the bailout and will
remain worryingly "accident prone" in coming years.
By agreeing that the European Central Bank would distribute
its profits from bond-buying and private bondholders would
take more losses, the ministers reduced Greece's debt to a
point that should secure funding from the International
Monetary Fund.
Italian and Spanish bond yields fell amid relief among
investors that a threat to the wider euro zone had been
avoided, although expectations of an agreement had been
largely priced into foreign exchange and stock markets.
"It's an important result that removes immediate risks of
contagion," Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti told a news
conference.
"A nightmare scenario was avoided," said Greek Finance
Minister Evangelos Venizelos in Athens. "It is maybe the most
important (deal) in Greece's post-war history."
While the deal provides time for the euro zone to put new
crisis measures in place over the coming months, it means
Greece will struggle for years without economic growth.
The austerity measures imposed on Athens are widely disliked
among the population and will put pressure on politicians who
must contest an election expected in April.
Further street unrest could test politicians' commitment to
cuts in wages, pensions and jobs. Greece's two biggest labour
unions called a protest in Athens on Wednesday.
An opinion poll taken just before the Brussels deal showed
that support for the two mainstream parties backing the
rescue had fallen to an all-time low while leftist,
anti-bailout parties showed gains.
Anastasis Chrisopoulos, a 31-year-old Athens taxi driver, saw
no reason to cheer the deal.
"So what?" he asked. "Things will only get worse. We have
reached a point where we're trying to figure out how to
survive just the next day, let alone the next 10 days, the
next month, the next year."
Conservative leader Antonis Samaras, a strong contender to
become next prime minister, said the rescue package's
debt-reduction targets could only be met with economic
growth.
"Without the rebound and growth of the economy ... not even
the immediate fiscal targets can be met, nor can the debt
become sustainable in the long-term," he said during a visit
to Cyprus.
Parliaments in three countries that have been most critical
of bailouts - Germany, the Netherlands and Finland - must now
approve the package. German Finance Minister Wolfgang
Schaeuble, who caused an outcry by suggesting that Greece was
a "bottomless pit", said he was confident it would be passed.
STUCK IN TRAGEDY
Many economists question whether Greece can pay off even a
reduced debt burden, suggesting the deal may only delay a
deeper default by a few months.
Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg said: "What's been done
is a meaningful step forward. Of course, the Greeks remain
stuck in their tragedy; this is a new act in a long drama.
"I don't think we should consider that they are cleared of
any problems, but I do think we've reduced the Greek problem
to just a Greek problem. It is no longer a threat to the
recovery in all of Europe, and it is another step forward."
Jennifer McKeown, senior European economist at Capital
Economics, said: "The austerity measures it will have to
implement and increased monitoring by the troika amidst
public outrage will make things harder and drive it deeper
into recession. There is a risk of a euro zone exit later
this year."
A return to economic growth in Greece could take as much as a
decade, a prospect that brought thousands onto the streets of
Athens to protest on Sunday. The cuts will deepen a recession
already in its fifth year, hurting government revenues.
"We sowed the wind, now we reap the whirlwind," said Vassilis
Korkidis, head of the Greek Commerce Confederation. "The new
bailout is selling us time and hope at a very high price,
while it doggedly continues to impose harsh austerity
measures that keep us in a long and deep recession."
EXTRA RELIEF
A report prepared by experts from the European Union,
European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund said
Greece would need extra relief to cut its debts near to the
official debt target given the worsening state of its
economy.
If Athens did not follow through on economic reforms and
savings to make its economy more competitive, its debt could
hit 160 percent by 2020, said the report.
"Given the risks, the Greek programme may thus remain
accident-prone, with questions about sustainability hanging
over it," the nine-page confidential report said.
The beefed-up monitoring of implementation of the reforms
could bolster accusations among some Greeks of interference
in domestic affairs but some critics say that is essential.
Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager, one of Athens' most
strident critics, told Dutch news agency ANP he had bargained
hard for the permanent monitoring mission.
"This programme is not something to cheer about," he said.
BOND SWAP
The accord will enable Athens to launch a bond swap with
private investors to help put it on a more stable financial
footing and keep it inside the euro zone.
About 100 billion euros of debt will be written off as banks
and insurers swap bonds they hold for longer-dated securities
that pay a lower coupon.
Private sector holders of Greek debt will take losses of 53.5
percent on the nominal value of their bonds. They had agreed
to a 50 percent nominal writedown, which equated to around a
70 percent loss on the net present value of the debt.
Juncker said he expected a high participation rate in the
deal, a view echoed by the German banking association.
Greece said it would legislate to allow it to enforce losses
on bondholders who do not take part voluntarily.
Euro zone central banks will also play their part.
A Eurogroup statement said the ECB would pass up profits it
made from buying Greek bonds over the past two years to
national central banks for their governments to pass on to
Athens "to further improve the sustainability of Greece's
public debt".
The ECB has spent about 38 billion euros on Greek government
debt with a face value of about 50 billion euros.
The private creditor bond exchange is expected to launch on
March 8 and complete three days later, Athens said on
Saturday. That means a 14.5-billion-euro bond repayment due
on March 20 would be restructured, allowing Greece to avoid
default.
The vast majority of the funds in the programme will be used
to finance the bond swap and ensure Greece's banking system
remains stable; some 30 billion euros will go to "sweeteners"
to get the private sector to sign up to the swap, 23 billion
will go to recapitalise Greek banks.
A further 35 billion or so will allow Greece to finance the
buying back of the bonds. Next to nothing will go directly to
help the Greek economy.
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