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Auditors to stay in Greece until new reforms are ready

Auditors from the EU, IMF and the European Central Bank are to stay in Greece until a credible reform programme is formed.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) mission chief Poul Thomsen, right, European Central Bank's (ECB) Klaus Masuch, left, and European Commission's director Matthias Mor
International Monetary Fund (IMF) mission chief Poul Thomsen, right, European Central Bank's (ECB) Klaus Masuch, left, and European Commission's director Matthias Mor
Image: Thanassis Stavrakis/AP/Press Association Images

AUDITORS FROM THE EU, IMF and the European Central Bank will remain in Greece until a credible reform programme is formed, a finance ministry source said on Sunday.

Auditors from the so-called troika arrived in Athens last week to report on the crisis-hit country’s implementation of reforms that are part of the EU-IMF loan agreement which have been keeping its economy afloat.

“We want to help and we will stay as long as it is needed until your programme is ready,” the International Monetary Fund’s Poul Thomsen said during a dinner with Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras, a source reported.

Thomsen said the troika would help Greece finalise the new measures and would then draft a report that will pave the way for the next installment of its loan agreement.

Behind on implementation of reforms

Greece is way behind in the implementation of the reforms, after back-to-back elections in May and June that caused a two-month political deadlock.

Following a first meeting last week, the political leaders of Greece’s conservative-led, three-party coalition government will meet again on Monday, to agree on €11.6 billion of spending cuts.

The cuts will hit pensions, healthcare and benefits and have angered leading private sector Greek union GSEE which met the international auditors on Friday.

Labour Minister Yiannis Vroutsis said those receiving small pensions will not be affected by the new measures in an interview with Sunday newspaper Typos tis Kyriakis.

“Finally it seems for the first time there is a strategic planning for a renegotiation” of the bailout terms, he said.

“The extension of the fiscal adjustment programmes will be the first achievement of the renegotiation. It will give us time to implement the structural reforms necessary to restart the economy and boost employment with the least possible social consequences.”

‘Whatever it takes’

As rumours of a Greek eurozone exit grew louder last week, Nobel prize-winning economist Robert Mundell told two Greek newspapers on Sunday that it was important for the country to remain in the eurozone.

In the aftermath of ECB chief Mario Draghi’s recent comments that the European Central Bank was ready to do “whatever it takes to preserve the euro,” Mundell claimed the ECB should issue its own bonds.

Mundell, who is often called the “father” of the euro, had warned last week that a euro exit would be disastrous for Greece and would take the country 20-50 years back.

- © AFP, 2012

Read: Merkel and Monti pledge to protect eurozone>

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Comments (17 Comments)

  • They should start by introducing Taxation…

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  • Beatings will continue until morale improves.

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  • They may have a long stay…

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  • Our government are no different. Highly paid politicians and their friends on state boards etc. Angela Kearns gets double what Obama earns and she runs a rehab. I hope the troika stay here for as long as it takes to bring our politicians back to reality.

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  • It mustn’t be forgotten that the Goldman Sachs gang have their dirty fingerprints all over this debacle, cooking the books in collusion with the corrupt Greek political and banking elites in order to qualify for Euro membership. The Greeks are being made an example of to strike fear into other sovereign states who might be entertaining ideas about debt default. We are witnessing the economic destruction of a proud nation so that the international banking criminals can hoover up anything of value for next to nothing, and keep their giant ponzi scheme going a bit longer. The greatest financial crime in history is unfolding before us, of which the rape of Greece is just one small part, and most people cant see it, or realise they are next in line. We have allowed ourselves to be robbed of our security and future by the bloodsuckers on Wall Street and London and their political enablers for far too long. The only solution to the crisis in Greece, in Ireland, and worldwide is debt forgiveness, and a complete overhaul of the financial system. Nothing short of a revolutionary action is now needed. Without it we are heading for the real financial meltdown which, with its attendant social chaos, will be of unimaginable proportions.
    http://www.iol.co.za/business/business-news/goldman-sachs-role-in-greece-a-real-scandal-1.1258930#.UBWqd0Rgs7A

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    • Also, when you consider that this paper (iol.co.za – independent online) is owned by our own Independent News & Media, you’d wonder if even this scandalous report hasn’t been massaged to look more benign than it is…

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  • Damocles 30/07/12 #

    This is like having your mum stand in your room until you finish tidying it.

    If you can’t trust a country to that degree why are you giving them so much money?

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  • Shouldn’t that read the “Buzzards” to stay in Greece to pick the bones from remaining carcus?

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    • JTHM 29/07/12 #

      If by “buzzards” you mean “the people with whom the Greek government entered into an agreement to borrow vast sums of money the default of which could break more than on major European economy”, then Yes. Maybe I’m a heartless capitalist pig, but I can understand the troika’s need to maximise the chance of that money ever coming back out of Greece.

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  • The European politicians are well aware of Goldman sacs etc. position .so what they running shitless from.

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  • Brilliant Ciaran we should all recognise it for what it is dismantle it slowly and carefully

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  • The Greeks should tell them to **** off out of their glorious nation. Sad to see such a honest decent hard working people reduced to begging basically :(

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    • How do you know they are honest decent and hard working?

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    • JTHM 29/07/12 #

      The Greek government of the time entered into an agreement to receive a series of bailout loans on the condition that they comply with a set of public-spending reduction measures. There were no hidden surprises. Don’t blame the troika, don’t blame the general populace, but do blame the previous and current Greek governments. They signed up to a deal when they were fairly sure they wouldn’t be able to honour that deal. If Greece is being screwed, it’s being screwed by their own politicians.

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    • You have a very strange world view Paddy. :(

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  • Nobody knew they could honour that level of debt .greece should (as should ireland) look to the extreme long term ,leave the euro devalue and get the economy going again and gently reduce excessive expenditure .one thing the e.u.forgets is that Greece (and Ireland) will b there long after merkel and all the other politicians have shovelled off so whats the panic (see how Germany got thro two wars).

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