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Dublin: 10 °C Thursday 23 May, 2013

Greece seeks austerity plan extension

The Greek Prime Minister will suggest spending cuts be spread over four years instead of two in his talks with German and French leaders next week.

File photo of Greece's Prime Minister Antonis Samaras
File photo of Greece's Prime Minister Antonis Samaras
Image: Thanassis Stavrakis/AP/Press Association Images

GREEK PRIME MINISTER Antonis Samaras will call for an extension to Greece’s austerity programme when he meets with Angela Merkel and Francois Hollande next week, the Financial Times reported.

Samaras will hold talks with the German chancellor and French president in Berlin and will suggest that public spending cuts be spread over four years instead of two, according to a document seen by the paper.

Greece is currently scrambling to find budget cuts – amounting to around five percent of GDP – to be implemented in 2013 and 2014 as part of its existing bailout deal with the European Union and International Monetary Fund.

Greece raised 4.063 billion euros in a sale of three-month treasury bills yesterday, paying a modestly higher rate of 4.43 per cent, the public debt management agency said.

The extraordinarily large sale should help the Greek government avoid a cash crunch, according to a finance ministry source, as it faces redemption of a 3.2-billion-euro bond held by the ECB which expires on August 20 and awaits the next installment of its EU-IMF bailout package.

Greece has been shut out of the long-term debt markets since 2010 and has regularly issued short-term debt.

Relying for its economic survival on EU-IMF bailout loans, Greece is waiting for the next installment of nearly 31.5 billion euros as a political deadlock, the result of back-to-back elections, has thrown its reform programme off track.

Auditors from the country’s international creditors, who visited Greece in late July, are expected to return in September.

- © AFP, 2012

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Comments (21 Comments)

  • Greece needs more than an extension to an austerity plan, it needs a miracle at this stage.

    Reply
    • And Ireland needs a write-down on our promissory note. Why can’t the politicians reward Ireland? We didn’t have a fiscal problem until we were sacrificed to save private investors.

      Reply
    • Or a global catastrophe, end of days event would be just as helpful

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    • Ireland needs some sort of write-down for it to be able to sustainably float on the stock market again. The problem at the moment is that Merkel & Co care so little about Ireland, because our economic figures in GDP are in slight growth. These people don’t see social impacts.

      If Greece manage to successfully agree an ‘extension’ to it’s economic destruction, it would help the economy in the short term, possibly bringing contraction per year down to -3% instead of -6.5%, but it wouldn’t be doing anything useful for it in the long term. It would only prolong the obvious default that needs to happen. But, of course, I’m sure that if Greece’s contraction rate fell to -3% Europe and it’s elite would celebrate their great success in ‘helping Greece’.

      Reply
    • “We didn’t have a fiscal problem until we were sacrificed to save private investors.”

      Well thats not really true is it?
      Look at the budget deficit even without the bank bailout costs.

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    • @ Gagsy 99. The point is if we didn’t have to cover the bail out costs there would have been a good chance we would not have been driven out of the bond markets. The & cost for our bonds only started to rise sharply after the bank bail out. Yes we would have need to address the budget deficit but we could have done it on our own terms rather then as directed by the Troika.

      Reply
    • http://www.sli-nios-fearr.com is the way to vote next time. For a better way ,to get us out of this economic disaster and move on in peace

      Reply
  • Ireland is NOT broke.Far from it. Golden opportunities for employers are here up for grabs.Bad times for the working person.

    Reply
  • Meanwhile, the lapdog of Merkel (Enda Kenny) continues to sell Ireland’s sovereignty down the drain.

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    • Rob 15/08/12 #

      The question is: will people continue to vote for FG? I hope not. We need change in Ireland. It’s time to vote for SF or the Socialist party.

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    • Rob, as much as I want to see change and the back of FG/LAB! My stomach could not hold if SF and co were to get into power. Sorry that is a step too far for my liking!!

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    • So Jack, If its not SF then I guess the only other option is FF. Good Luck with them….

      Reply
    • Rob 15/08/12 #

      Jack Canon wrote: “Rob, as much as I want to see change and the back of FG/LAB! My stomach could not hold if SF and co were to get into power. Sorry that is a step too far for my liking!!”

      Why?
      What is your stigma with SF?
      They represent an alternative to FG’s tax breaks to the mega-rich and a new way forward without having to pay the bondholders.

      Reply
    • Whether we’re in the euro or not Irish sovereignty was always an illusion. Irrespective of our break with sterling in 1979, we’ve always been beholden to Germany as the biggest economy in Europe. In a perfect world we could leave the euro and devalue a new Irish currency. Unfortunately the banks would collapse over night as personal and mortgage debt will remain denominated in euros while the new punt would be worth a fraction of a euro. It’s a loose loose for us I’m afraid.

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    • Maybe consider voting for individuals ideals rather than just because they are in a party you have always voted for

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    • I’d have no problem with the Socialist getting a bigger slice of the vote, but Rob, SF’s only priority is power, not the country. They are only a different version of FF.

      Reply
    • Unless the people rise up and take back the country, wipe the slate clean and start again – nothing is going to change.
      So most likely nothing is going to change.

      Reply
  • Not too long to go now before Greece are forced to leave this failed German sponsored EU/Euro experiment, the house of cards will start to crumble completely and we wll finally be back to some form of normality. With our own currencies, borders, and sovereignty. Bring it on…!!!

    Reply
  • IRELAND has money but its the elite that have it and the minister for justice is a millionaire as well as other ministers having big portfollios which explains their way of treating the rich and poor

    Reply

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