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Eurozone Ministers Deny Greek Request to Extend Debt Talks | |
(35 minutes later) | |
BRUSSELS — Eurozone finance ministers on Saturday rejected Greece’s request to extend its debt negotiations beyond Tuesday’s deadline, seeming to bring a bitter end to months of discussions of how or whether to continue providing bailout loans to Athens. | |
The rapid turn of events came only hours after the Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, surprised Europe by calling for a national referendum on whether his country should accept bailout aid under terms he bitterly opposes. | |
Mr. Tsipras’s announcement to resort to the ballot box left the eurozone ministers with few options in their five-month effort to devise loan terms with Greece that all parties could accept. The ministers had been racing the clock — with five emergency meetings in the last 10 days — to reach a deal before Tuesday, when the current bailout program for Greece expires. | |
“The Greek government has broken off the process,” the leader of the Eurogroup of eurozone finance ministers, Jeroen Dijsselbloem, told a news conference. “However regrettable, the program will expire on Tuesday night,” he said, referring to the bailout package. | |
When the Eurogroup reconvenes later Saturday, “it will be without the Greek colleague,” said Mr. Dijsselbloem, referring to Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek finance minister. The aim, he said, will be to take any measures necessary “to strengthen and to uphold the credibility of the Eurozone.” | |
Heading into the meeting on Saturday, Mr. Dijsselbloem had all but ruled out extending the bailout program to allow for a Greek referendum or to otherwise grant leniency to Athens. | |
“That is a sad decision for Greece because it has closed the door on further talks, where the door was still open in my mind,” he said. | “That is a sad decision for Greece because it has closed the door on further talks, where the door was still open in my mind,” he said. |
Hanging in the balance has been an installment of 7.2 billion euros, or about $8 billion, from that bailout program that Athens desperately needs to avoid defaulting soon on its near-term debt obligations. | Hanging in the balance has been an installment of 7.2 billion euros, or about $8 billion, from that bailout program that Athens desperately needs to avoid defaulting soon on its near-term debt obligations. |
Talks seemed to collapse on Friday after Mr. Tsipras accused eurozone creditors like Germany, as well as the International Monetary Fund, of blackmailing his country. Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, though, insisted creditors had offered an “extremely generous” package to Greece. | Talks seemed to collapse on Friday after Mr. Tsipras accused eurozone creditors like Germany, as well as the International Monetary Fund, of blackmailing his country. Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, though, insisted creditors had offered an “extremely generous” package to Greece. |
Mr. Tsipras then threw the matter into further confusion by announcing shortly after midnight in Athens that he would ask Parliament to authorize a referendum late the next week in which the Greek people could decide whether to accept the creditors’ latest offer. But he seemed to stack the deck, saying that the creditors were calling for “new, unbearable measures,” including tax increases and cuts to pensions and salaries that were a “humiliation” to Greece. | Mr. Tsipras then threw the matter into further confusion by announcing shortly after midnight in Athens that he would ask Parliament to authorize a referendum late the next week in which the Greek people could decide whether to accept the creditors’ latest offer. But he seemed to stack the deck, saying that the creditors were calling for “new, unbearable measures,” including tax increases and cuts to pensions and salaries that were a “humiliation” to Greece. |
The Greek Parliament was set to vote late Saturday on whether to hold that public vote. But the referendum would not occur before the Tuesday expiration of the current bailout program. | |
Since the Greek economy imploded five years ago, the creditors — the I.M.F., the European Central Bank and the other eurozone nations — have committed loans to Greece worth more than €240 billion, or about $264 billion at today’s exchange rates. | Since the Greek economy imploded five years ago, the creditors — the I.M.F., the European Central Bank and the other eurozone nations — have committed loans to Greece worth more than €240 billion, or about $264 billion at today’s exchange rates. |
An expiration of the current bailout program would leave Greece unable to tap the €7.2 billion remaining in the rescue package. And it would almost certainly guarantee that Greece would default on a payment of about 1.6 billion euros, or $1.8 billion, that is due to the I.M.F. on Tuesday. | An expiration of the current bailout program would leave Greece unable to tap the €7.2 billion remaining in the rescue package. And it would almost certainly guarantee that Greece would default on a payment of about 1.6 billion euros, or $1.8 billion, that is due to the I.M.F. on Tuesday. |
The refusal by the Eurogroup to grant Mr. Tsipras the extension was the first clear sign that Mr. Tsipras and his leftist government had overplayed their hand by failing to scare the country’s creditors — wearied by months of continuous wrangling and emergency meetings — into making last-minute concessions. | |
Arriving at the meeting on Saturday, the Dutch state secretary for finance, Eric Wiebes, also appeared to reject Mr. Tsipras’s suggestion for more time. “I see no reason for an extension,” Mr. Wiebes told reporters. “The deadline has been known for four months.” | |
Eurozone ministers might instead discuss a so-called Plan B, which officials say is aimed at coordinating decisions by central banks in eurozone countries to limit any potential regional damage from a Greek default. | Eurozone ministers might instead discuss a so-called Plan B, which officials say is aimed at coordinating decisions by central banks in eurozone countries to limit any potential regional damage from a Greek default. |
Much of what happens next in the rapidly unfolding Greek crisis rests with the European Central Bank. The central bank’s president, Mario Draghi, was to meet in Brussels on Saturday with the Greek deputy prime minister, Yannis Dragasakis, and with Euclid Tsakalotos, the Greek official who has been coordinating negotiations with creditors. | Much of what happens next in the rapidly unfolding Greek crisis rests with the European Central Bank. The central bank’s president, Mario Draghi, was to meet in Brussels on Saturday with the Greek deputy prime minister, Yannis Dragasakis, and with Euclid Tsakalotos, the Greek official who has been coordinating negotiations with creditors. |
The European Central Bank has kept Greek banks afloat lately with daily doses of emergency liquidity to counter the outflow of money as anxious Greeks have withdrawn their savings. While there has been no sign of a full-scale bank run in Greece since Mr. Tsipras’s announcement, the lines at cash machines on Saturday in Athens were much longer than they had been in recent days. | |
In an early morning television address, Mr. Tsipras appealed to the Eurogroup finance ministers to extend the bailout by “a few days” — presumably to allow the referendum to take place first. | |
But frustrations with the government in Athens have reached new highs. Giving Greece more time is likely to meet stiff opposition from finance ministers, including Wolfgang Schäuble of Germany — although some other voices in Germany appeared to call for a more supple approach. | |
Speaking on Saturday morning, Sigmar Gabriel, Germany’s vice chancellor, urged his colleagues to consider the proposal by Mr. Tsipras. | Speaking on Saturday morning, Sigmar Gabriel, Germany’s vice chancellor, urged his colleagues to consider the proposal by Mr. Tsipras. |
Mr. Gabriel, who is the leader of Germany’s center-left Social Democrats, told Deutschlandfunk radio: | Mr. Gabriel, who is the leader of Germany’s center-left Social Democrats, told Deutschlandfunk radio: |
“We would be well advised not simply to push this proposal from Mr. Tsipras aside and say that it’s a trick. If the questions are clear — if it’s really clear that they are voting on a program that has been negotiated — it could make sense.” | |
A Greek government spokesman, Gavriil Sakellaridis, said Mr. Tsipras spoke on Friday night by phone with Mr. Draghi, the central bank president, who “showed absolute understanding and sensitivity to the democratic decision of the Greek government.” | |
But if the European Central Bank ends its emergency funding to Greece’s banks, the Greek government might need to impose capital controls, limiting how much money people and companies could withdraw from banks. That would further weaken an already ailing economy and could stir popular anger. | |
The bigger fear is that a Greek default could force the country eventually to be the first to leave the 19-nation euro currency union and threaten the regional integrity of the broader European Union. | The bigger fear is that a Greek default could force the country eventually to be the first to leave the 19-nation euro currency union and threaten the regional integrity of the broader European Union. |