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Politics

Bailout for Greece agreed

June 15, 2017

Greece's latest tranche of bailout cash has been agreed by 19 eurozone ministers meeting in Luxembourg. It includes steps to foster Greek growth and a stand-by promise from the International Monetary Fund.

https://p.dw.com/p/2emBM
Finance chiefs: Germany's Wolfgang Schäuble, France's Bruno Le Maire, Greece's Euclid Tsakalotos,  EU's Pierre Moscovici
Finance chiefs: Germany's Wolfgang Schäuble, France's Bruno Le Maire, Greece's Euclid Tsakalotos, EU's Pierre MoscoviciImage: picture alliance/AP Photo/G. Vanden Wijngaert

Multiple news agencies said the tranche would amount to 8.5 billion euros ($9.5 billion). It included a proposed International Monetary Fund (IMF) buffer, exceeding the 7 billion euros Athens needs to repay in July in order to avoid insolvency.

The Eurozone group's Dutch chairman Jeroen Dijsselbloem said the deal spanned "all elements" under discussion.

Schäuble 'confident' of Greece securing funds

The new loan disbursement had hinged on a condition set by the German parliament that the IMF joined the Greek bailout. The IMF, in turn, had demanded details on what relief was also envisaged for 2018.

Jeroen Dijsselbloem
'All elements' covered in talks, say DijsselbloemImage: Getty Images/J.Macdougall

"I am glad to announce that we have achieved an agreement on all the elements - conditionality, the debt strategy moving forward, and International Monetary Fund participation," Dijsselbloem said. 

"We're now going into the last year of the financial support program for Greece - we will prepare a financial exit strategy going forward to enable Greece to stand on its own feet again over the course of the next year," he said.

Schäuble: Greece still has work to do

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble told Deutsche Welle late Thursday that it was now particularly in Greece's interests that it improve its competitiveness. 

"That is certainly the goal; that from the middle of next year Greece is able to stand on its own two feet," said Schäuble (pictured above with other finance chiefs: France's Bruno Le Maire, Greece's Euclid Tsakalotos and the EU's Pierre Moscovici).

"We always knew that Greece had a very difficult path ahead and it will remain a long, arduous journey. Therefore one must not create the illusion for the Greek public that everything has already been achieved. But they are now making good progress and we're helping Greece," he added.

Schäuble also told German public ARD television that the inclusion of the IMF as a lender - a condition set by the German parliament - would result in the international lender paying out but only later.

"Our understanding is that this is not a fundamental change to the program," Schaeuble said. "In the end it is for the budget committee to decide."

Debt relief had been a hard sell in Germany, the biggest contributor, which faces a federal election in September.

Future participation by IMF

"I would like to announce my intention to propose to the IMF's Executive Board the approval in principle of a new International Monetary Fund stand-by arrangement (program) for Greece," IMF head Christine Lagarde announced.

Griechenland Premierminister Alexis Tsipras berichtet Parteimitglieder über die EU-Rettungsaktion
Under pressure - Alexis TsiprasImage: picture-alliance/AP Photo/Y. Karahalis

Earlier on Thursday, Dijsselbloem had told reporters that lenders, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), were agreed that Greece had pushed through requested reforms.

Meltdown seven years ago

It will be the third bailout for Greece since it entered a financial meltdown seven years ago; the IMF had underpinned the first two loan packages.

The reforms sought by lenders, including further Greek pension cuts and tax hikes, had placed mounting pressure on Greek Prime Minister Alexix Tsipras, who has faced resistance from an electorate weary of the austerity measures that Tsipras' Syriza party had pledged to end.

ipj/msh (Reuters, dpa, AFP, AP)