EU bailout decision unlikely to soothe Athens’ Sisyphean headache
As lenders decide on
Eurozone finance ministers decide on Thursday how much debt relief to give Athens in return for its compliance with economic reforms over the last three years.
The aim of the Luxembourg meeting is to ensure Athens will be able to finance itself, bearing in mind that Greece still has to service a debt of 180 percent of GDP, the highest in the 19-member currency bloc. And with growth expected at 1.9 percent this year the task facing Athens could be described as, well, Herculean.
Expectations are that a loan payment of between €10 billion ($12 billion) and €12 billion will be agreed, in addition to a cash buffer of up to €20 billion that would provide liquidity until the end of 2019.
Greece’s post-bailout future, some say it may not differ much from its bailout present: targets, compliance and disbursements. DW talked with Alexander Kritikos, an expert on Greek political-economy.
Athens, advised by Rothschild & Company, could then choose the right moment over the next two years to re-enter the sovereign bond market, with the ECB expected to reschedule some of Athens’ existing debt, pushing repayment dates back on the €130 billion lent to Greece under its second bailout to the 2030s and 2040s.
Crucially, however, loan write-offs are not expected.
European Commissioner for Economic and Financial Affairs Pierre Moscovici called on Thursday for what he called “a balanced compromise between all actors, ensuring growth and sustainable debt for the future, meaning measures to lighten Greece’s debt burden, which must be put on a sustainable path.”
Is it sustainable?
“At the moment Greece is not borrowing on the credit markets, having dipped its toes in two months ago, before the Italy crisis changed things,” Kritikos said.
“Most people in the market think a 5 percent yield is the minimum lenders will demand to lend Athens more money,” Kritikos said. “And this is not sustainable. Anything below Greece’s growth rate of about 2 percent is unsustainable. I don’t think Greece will return to the market until the Italy situation calms down,” he added.
Since Italy formed an anti-euro government in May investors have been selling Greek government bonds, driving prices down and yields, a key measure of creditworthiness, up. The government’s cost of borrowing has in turn also been driven up.
Although the interest rate, or yield, on Greece’s benchmark 10-year bond has fallen to a 4.5 percent, still far higher than benchmark German bonds, it is still way down on its 2010 highs, that is to say, lows.
But therein lies the rub: Can Greece stand on its own feet for the first time since its financial meltdown in 2010 after it exits its latest bailout on August 21?
Déjà vu all over again
European creditors have lent a total of €241.6 billion to Greece to date, while the IMF disbursed an additional €32.1 billion during the first two bailout programs.
After understating its budget deficit figures in 2009, Greece was unable to borrow funds on commercial markets and was on the verge of insolvency by 2010. In May 2010, eurozone countries agreed to its first rescue package, bringing together just under €53 billion ($61.4 billion) in bilateral loans. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) also lent an additional €20 billion.
In March 2012, euro-zone countries and the IMF approved a second bailout package for a total of €153.8 billion.
These bailouts went hand-in-hand with austerity measures, the country being required to carry out far-reaching reforms. By 2014 the Greece economy had started to grow and Athens was able to raise money in the markets again.
An election in January 2015 brought the leftist Syriza party, led by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, into power. Tsipras said he would renegotiate the bailout terms and suspend the reform program, but this shunted the economy back into recession.
But in August 2015 Greece missed its IMF debt payments and Athens and its European creditors agreed to a third bailout package worth €86 billion under the European Stability Mechanism (ESM).