Greece debt haircut out of the question
Sarajevo: German Chancellor Angela Merkel reiterated on Thursday that she opposes a debt “haircut” for Greece, a day after IMF chief Christine Lagarde called for debt restructuring for the crisis-hit country. “I have said that a classic haircut is out of the question for me and that hasn’t changed between the day before yesterday and today,” Merkel told reporters on a visit in Sarajevo. Merkel said she couldn’t yet comment on the latest proposals the left-wing government in Athens was preparing for the three creditor institutions the EU, ECB and IMF.
“I am currently not in a position (to say) and can only do so once the three institutions have made an assessment what it means and whether the programme is sufficient for the next three years, and what it means in terms of debt sustainability,” Merkel said. Merkel said the creditors had since 2012 looked at Greece’s debt sustainability and had previously extended payback periods for loans, but she insisted that she opposes a classic haircut or debt write-down.
Later in the German business capital Frankfurt, finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble was also asked about possible debt relief for Greece. “Debt sustainability is not feasible without a haircut and I think IMF is correct in saying that,” he told a central bank conference.“But I’m also saying... there cannot be a haircut because it would infringe on the system of the European Union and after all the European Union is a community of common laws.”
He said Greece had in 2012 already been given debt reprofiling or more time to repay what it owes.“So the leeway we have on the restructuring of debt or the reprofiling of debt is very low,” Schaeuble said.“In the days to come we will of course discuss whether there is an option still but I'm more sceptical in that respect than Mr (Michel) Sapin,” his French counterpart, who was attending the same Frankfurt conference.
EU President Donald Tusk said Greece's creditors must make a “realistic” proposal for managing the country's crushing 320-billion-euro ($350-billion) debt if Athens delivers a workable programme of reforms. Leaders of the 28-nation European Union, including the 19 states that share the euro, are to hold a summit on Sunday billed as the “final deadline” to decide whether to save Greece.