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Greek Debt Deal: Greek Leaders Agree On Austerity Measures To Satisfy Lenders

Greece Debt Crisis

First Posted: 02/ 9/2012 8:34 am Updated: 02/ 9/2012 9:07 am

Greek political leaders have reached a deal on austerity measures that satisfy European Union and International Monetary Fund lenders, according to The Financial Times.

The AP is also reporting that the Greek Prime Minister's office is saying that the coalition parties struck a deal with new cuts.

The agreement would allow Greece to get a 130 billion euro ($172 billion) bailout, staving off default.

Here is the full report from Reuters:

Greek leaders clinched a long-stalled deal on reforms and austerity measures needed to secure a bailout and avoid a messy default, government sources said, hours before the country's financial backers were to meet in Brussels on Thursday.

Athens' partners in the European Union and the International Monetary Fund have been exasperated by a lack of agreement on the sacrifices they demanded in return for a 130 billion euro ($172 billion) bailout, with time running out for Greece before a major March 20 bond redemption.

Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos set off for Brussels without a complete deal after all-night talks with leaders of the three Greek coalition parties and chief EU and IMF inspectors left one sensitive issue - pension cuts - unresolved.

But following further negotiation on Thursday, two government sources said an overall agreement had been reached.

"A few minutes ago, I got a call from the Prime Minister of Greece saying that an agreement had been reached and has been endorsed by the major parties," European Central Bank President Mario Draghi told a news conference in Frankfurt in the first official confirmation.

The euro and European stocks strengthened on news of the breakthrough, which raised prospects of averting a chaotic hard default by the euro zone's most indebted country within weeks, that could send tremors around the global economy.

The risk premium investors charge for holding Italian and Spanish bonds rather than safe-haven German Bunds fell back.

Euro zone officials say the full package must be agreed with Greece and approved by the EU, IMF and European Central Bank by February 15 so legal paperwork can be completed in time to avoid a chaotic default that may threaten the global economic recovery.

"The financial survival of the country in the coming years depends on the new program ... It is a time of responsibility for everyone," Venizelos said.

Greece's two major labor unions called a 48-hour strike for Friday and Saturday against the reforms that the party chiefs managed to agree on.

"The painful measures that create misery for the youth, the unemployed and pensioners do not leave us much room," secretary general of the ADEDY union, Ilias Iliopoulos, told Reuters.

"We won't accept them. There will be a social uprising."

Venizelos should now be able to present to fellow euro zone finance ministers a fully-fledged new bailout plan, including a commitment for 3.3 billion euros in budget cuts this year, when they meet at 1700 GMT.

Before then, all eyes will be on what the ECB is willing to do to help Greece at its monthly policy meeting.

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Euro zone in graphics r.reuters.com/hyb65p

Interactive crisis timeline link.reuters.com/xuw36s

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WRITTEN COMMITMENT SOUGHT

After the overnight talks, a senior government official said the party chiefs had agreed on how to make about 90 percent of the promised savings, leaving a relatively small hole in the calculations.

Asked how the differences over pension cuts had been resolved, another government official told Reuters: ""There will be cuts in other areas of public spending and we will see how we will minimize reductions in pensions."

International lenders are demanding that the party leaders commit themselves in writing to implement the program of pay and pension cuts, structural and administrative reforms.

The leaders have been loath to accept the lenders' tough conditions, which are certain to be unpopular with voters. They face parliamentary elections possibly as early as April.

"In these difficult hours we have to look after the ordinary people, the pensioners," conservative New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras said after the political leaders' meeting.

"I haven't got the right to not negotiate hard and I don't care what other people think about that. We have to make sure that people will suffer less."

Newspaper editorials criticized the harshness of the austerity measures demanded by Greece's lenders, but said there was no other option but to give in and agree.

"The memorandum seems, and in fact is, heavy and unbearable for the majority of the Greek people but unfortunately it is the only choice so that the country is not led over the cliff," financial daily Imerisia said.

Greece has been falling deeper into recession since it was rescued by a first bailout deal in May 2010, and latest unemployment data showed the country's jobless rate rose to a new record of 20.9 percent in November.

Industrial output fell 11.3 percent in December, in further proof of the deep economic malaise.

ALMOST THERE

Prospects for a bailout deal had brightened when the finance ministers' chairman Jean-Claude Juncker called the Brussels meeting - which IMF managing director Christine Lagarde will attend - to examine the bailout plan.

On offer from the EU and IMF is a package involving the new rescue funds and a bond swap with private creditors to ease the nation's large debt burden.

Athens is also urging the ECB to forego profits on its Greek bond holdings in what could raise 12 billion euros or more. The bank's 23-member Governing Council met on Thursday but Draghi declined to say how the Greek bonds held by the ECB and national central banks would be handled.

For the bailout, Athens must accept conditions requiring big cuts in many Greeks' living standards. The smallest member of the coalition, the far-right LAOS party, was particularly uncomfortable with the measures.

Panos Beglitis, spokesman for PASOK which is in the coalition along with LAOS and the conservative New Democracy party, said the leaders had agreed to cut the minimum wage by 22 percent as part of efforts to make the economy more competitive. Plans to scrap holiday bonuses paid to private sector workers had been dropped.

Two sources said the government would promise spending cuts and tax rises worth 13 billion euros from 2012 to 2015, almost double the seven billion originally pledged.

Other elements of the deal have been gradually slotting into place, including the bond swap with private creditors to ease Greece's debt burden by reducing the value of government bonds held by banks and insurers.

Private bondholders are expected to take real losses of about 70 percent on their holdings as part of the swap, under which they receive new, longer-dated Greek bonds to try to reduce Greece's debt burden by about 100 billion euros.

Talks on the swap have dragged on for weeks, complicated by the position of hedge funds and demands that public creditors also chip in. Officials and bankers say the deal cannot be finalized until the rest of the rescue package is nailed down.

($1 = 0.7545 euros)

(Additional reporting by Renee Maltezou, Lefteris Papadimas and Karolina Tagaris in Athens and Paul Carrel in Frankfurt; Writing by David Stamp and Deepa Babington; editing by Elizabeth Piper)

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Greek political leaders have reached a deal on austerity measures that satisfy European Union and International Monetary Fund lenders, according to The Financial Times. The AP is also reporting th...
Greek political leaders have reached a deal on austerity measures that satisfy European Union and International Monetary Fund lenders, according to The Financial Times. The AP is also reporting th...
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07:07 PM on 02/12/2012
Never forget the IMF is made up of a lot of our leaders.

The leaders we have now are taking the soul and the music out of our country. They are destroying the sense of fairness.

We probably are next. They have done a lot already, shipping jobs overseas and running the country in as much debt as they could. Now they want to keep the ceiling on our budget when they have ran up many committments and need to pay for them.
01:07 PM on 02/12/2012
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/live-streams-athens-and-greek-parliament

Today at midnight local time, 5pm Eastern, the Greek parliament is expected to pass the latest bill finalizing the terms of the second Greek bailout, which as explained yesterday has quietly increased from €130 billion to €210 billion.

Needless to say, it will pass, as the opportunity cost for Greece of "pledging" to achieve unattainable targets while doing absolutely nothing, as has been shown repeatedly over the past two years, is zero.

The only real questions are i) what the Greek population may do in response to this latest selling out of a population "led" by an unelected banker, which if history is any precedent, the answer is not much, and ii) how Germany will subvert this latest event, and put the bail [sic] back in Greece's court once again.
05:00 PM on 02/11/2012
Ah yes, the patient needs more bleeding. After all, it's still alive, and that will never do.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Morgan378
04:46 PM on 02/10/2012
Tax raise 2012-2015? One of the factors that found Greece in this debacle - as it was explained to me - was that there were a great many "entities" (people AND businesses) in Greece that: #1) didn't submit tax forms, #2) even submitted paid too little, #3) even submitted worked out an unwarranted refund, #4) even submitted didn't pay at all. All this and finding the Greek Government unable - or unwilling by threat of strikes - to enforce the Tax Laws as they had already existed makes taxation as an answer rather "moot". This while promising their people employment, greater exports and great wage, benefit and pension packages for retirement at the age of 53 over decades exhausted the financial resources of the Greek Nation. Naturally the Greek Unions (all 2 of them?) don't wish to give this "Shangri-la" away. What people would? If this is indeed the case, I'm reasonably certain there are French and German people who'd like to retire at 53 yrs of age also. Only one question remains: Where do THEY sign up?
07:13 PM on 02/12/2012
Whose fault was it if taxes were not paid? The government's fault. It is all part of the pattern. Don't pay taxes, then when the country goes down they can blame it on the people.

Most of the wealthy from all civilised countries are creating problems with the help of the governments.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TMS3100
Tea Party has run off with his light saber.
07:15 PM on 02/12/2012
Really?
08:00 PM on 02/12/2012
That is a stupid statement.
11:10 AM on 02/10/2012
For years, Greek politicians promised their voters the moon in order to get their votes. This reached excesses far exceeding the social programs of most other countries, including the United States. Now they must cut back and the citizens are not surprisingly unwilling to give up these unrealistic "benefits." It must be done, however, although safety nets must be developed to soften the changes. Citizens must be realistic while they must still recieve help in necessary social programs in education, health and support for the elderly. Cooler heads must prevail.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Morgan378
05:16 PM on 02/10/2012
While it's agreed that Greek politician's promised their people everything but the Black Hole at the center of our galaxy - the Greek People "must have" what they can afford, and unfortunately perhaps, not all the social safety they desire. Well, unless Greece found the source of oxygen originating in the Plains of Thermopylea, capped it off for export for the rest of the World - there was little truth to their lies. Unable to enforce their tax laws already existing, and without new revenue from some "miracle" export - they were found tossing a VERY HOT POTATO around the table for a long time while it got hotter and hotter and when the music stopped the one left with the potato didn't have a chair to sit in. Without "the Stones" to face the Unions - let alone the People - they kept driving that bus right off the cliff of insolvency. Above, it states the Unions will fight. Of course they would. Who'd wanna give up retirement packages like their's when they turn 53 years old? But then Greece still needs someone to drive the busses, so they hire a 23 yr old, who again retires at 53 yrs old. Then they still need someone to drive the bus, so they hire, etc.,....on and on until now they are paying - at PUBLIC expense - 3 people to drive that bus. So while "they must" - with the cooler heads you and I hope prevail - it may
stephan67
Eternity and a day
07:37 AM on 02/10/2012
There EU doesn't exist anymore. It's Germany with its satellite states ( Netherlands,Austria ,Finnland ,Luxenburg etc) that makes the decision now. The decisions aren't made in Brussels , but in Berlin. Southern European countries (Italy ,Spain, Portugal ,Greece) are in ruins. Great Britain knows already the game that the Germans are playing , and very soon the situation in the EU will get worse.
02:23 PM on 02/10/2012
He who pays the piper, calls the tune. The PIGS you mentioned want to retire at 50, with fat pensions, pay little or no taxes, produce little, work less and be bailed out when needed...that attitude would ruin anybody, no wonder the Germans complain. It is similar to The Left here vs. the Tea Party. You can't spend more than you take in and higher taxes are not a long-term solution. And when you get the taxes, don't fritter it away on Solindra-type schemes ! It is REAL productivity that counts and THAT is the game.
stephan67
Eternity and a day
02:05 AM on 02/11/2012
Your comment is superficial. Twenty years ago Italy was a rich country , produced everything and had increased exports. What happend? Did they decide suddenly to produce little ? It doesn't make sense what you write. The cause for their economic collapse was the expensive currency Euro ,that destroyed their exports.It was a currency designed to help the Germans become stronger. They made the decisions after all. It was a trap actually. Sweden and Denmark that don't have the Euro currency ,eventhough they spend much money on Social Security (your argument about the left is wrong) are in excellent condition.
07:29 PM on 02/12/2012
Portugal ,Greece, Italy ,Spain (abreviation PIGS)

Judean says:
The PIGS you mentioned want to retire at 50, with fat pensions, pay little or no taxes, produce little, work less and be bailed out when needed..

No, the rich want to never work, always have most of the money in their bank accounts, pay little or no taxes, produce nothing and be bailed out like the bankers.

The people didn't send our jobs overseas. It was our government and buisness leaders.
06:29 AM on 02/10/2012
This should be required reading for ALL Americans because what's happening in Greece will be here in the U.S. very shortly. We are on an unsustainable ($4 trillion of debt added in BHO's first 3 years) path here in the U.S. I suggest you stock up on food, gold and ammo because the riots won't be pretty.
09:02 AM on 02/10/2012
EU is going to implode within three to four years if not sooner. I don't believe the citizens of Germany would let their leaders throw good money after bad money to pigs in Greece. There are many other countries in Europe following Greece. Unfortunately B Hussein Obama is doing the same. Tax the rich and take it from the makers and give it to the takers. After there are no more makers the proverbial sh@&t will hit the fan.
07:40 PM on 02/12/2012
Most non thinkers can't fathom that the poor who you refer to as the takers and those who make money as the makers actually add to the bottom line.

Every program that is produced for the poor (you call them takers) makes money for the businesses that you call the makers.

Most of the poor can not work because of physical, intellectual or emotional problems. What do you plan to do, throw them out in the street?

The haves have spent the last 3 years or longer stuffing money in their pockets and taking from the have nots. Typical right wing and conservatives.
04:38 PM on 02/10/2012
Great response. I can't wait to see what these blind fools have to say when the collapse does come. They will as usual be looking for the government to solve the problem but there will be no solution except a REAL PAINFUL one at that point.
05:14 AM on 02/10/2012
No matter what your call it, it still spells P.I.G.S. Please stop dragging this on. I'm only a plebe, but I saw this coming over two years ago. Your misery is being compounded by the media laughing at your ignorance.
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02:20 AM on 02/10/2012
Soon to come to America.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0dD5pwsfMQ
If you don't watch the whole interview, at least watch from minute 5---it will explain what is going on.
Gregg Palast now lives in Europe because he couldn't report honestly here due to MSM restraining him.
12:27 AM on 02/10/2012
The Greek politicians have all agreed to austerity moves, so they can qualify for a bailout...but the average Hellenicon in the Agora has not! They were promised retirement (at age 50), a fat pension, low-to-no taxes (let someone else pay) and thtat's what they want. What a sad sight...after 3,000 years of history Greece has become the worst example of European culture. An angry, willful, sceaming child that DEMANDS what it cannot afford and fights the police, burns the town and throws gasoline bombs to have it's way... Democracy at work. Yasou Phila !
09:07 AM on 02/10/2012
Our Founding Father Thomas Jefferson warned us against having Democracy. We were until B Hussein Obama took over a Republic. Of course we started to descend slowly by Progressives since Teddy Roosevelt through Woodrow Wilson FDR and the Bushes towards Democracy.
02:08 PM on 02/10/2012
Sorry buddy, but I can't agree that we live in a democracy. Direct rule by the people??? I don't think so.
First of all, only the rich can attain high office, the higher the office the richer the guy. In Obama's case he was the front man for the Democrats/Liberal Left/Big Government /Spendocrats...but don't worry he will leave office a millionaire and his speeches with net 6 figures. Don't forget it was Eisenhower who warned us against the Military/Industrial complex and we're right in the middle of it, right up to our necks
Does the military use K-rations, or make their own food, no and it COSTS$$$ !
11:26 PM on 02/09/2012
Greek interim leadership has not agreed yet to anything as of 2/09/2012 .Discussions are still on. If they have solve one problem under the troika's pressure it doesn't mean that the whole package will be accepted or Greeks will refuse the the whole package and go for bankruptcy.So do not report news that they are not guaranteed yet
I hope the present leaders who were never elected by the citizens will prefer bankruptcy than give in to Merkel's dream.
09:10 AM on 02/10/2012
Merkel's dream??? You can hit a dead horse but it will not help you. Germany should not give Greece one more Dime, Neither the IMF.
07:29 PM on 02/09/2012
It is peculiar and interesting that the ECB-IMF-EU creditors refer to themselves (and in the news) as "troika". This term has a very specific connotation, see the Wiki explanation:

"NKVD troika or Troika, in Soviet Union history, were commissions of three persons who convicted people without trial. ... Troikas are credited with the death sentences or exile of over 600,000 people"
07:19 PM on 02/09/2012
The deal was reached today, after they received the money, it will be back to square one. If you believe that the Greeks are going to follow an austerity program, I probably could sell you the Brooklyn Bridge.
11:32 PM on 02/09/2012
The deal was not reached today ;they are still talking. see my post. If an agreement will be reached that would be against every citizen in Greece. The decision will not be legal since the Interim leadership was not elected by the citizens but only by Merkel so their decision is not legal.