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Greek PM Wants 'Honest Compromise' With Lenders


Greece's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras gestures during a parliamentary session in Athens, March 30, 2015, after Tsipras called the special session of parliament to brief lawmakers on the course of recent troubled negotiations with bailout lenders to overhaul cost-cutting reforms.
Greece's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras gestures during a parliamentary session in Athens, March 30, 2015, after Tsipras called the special session of parliament to brief lawmakers on the course of recent troubled negotiations with bailout lenders to overhaul cost-cutting reforms.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on Monday appealed for an “honest compromise” with lenders but warned Greece would not agree to an “unconditional” one, after its biggest creditor demanded it do more to show commitment to reform.

With its cash coffers emptying rapidly, Athens is running out of time to convince eurozone and IMF lenders that it will implement reforms and is worthy of fresh aid. Athens could run out of cash by April 20, a source has previously said.

“It is true that we are seeking an honest compromise with our lenders but don't expect an unconditional agreement from us,” Tsipras told parliament at a special session on the status of talks with lenders.

The radical leftist premier gave away litle on progress made in talks, but, in a boost for the government, said a new law making it easier to repay tax arrears had already resulted in 100 million euros flowing into state coffers in a week.

Tsipras appealed to the center-right opposition to support his efforts. Former Prime Minister Antonis Samaras said his conservatives would support efforts to unlock aid but not at the price of driving Greece into the ground.

“Whatever you do, do it fast,” said Samaras, who lost the January national election to Tsipras, accusing the 40-year-old leader of facing “deadlocked talks and panic”.

The comments came after Greece's biggest creditor Germany said the eurozone would give Athens no further aid until it has a more detailed list of reforms and some are enacted into law, adding to skepticism over plans presented last week.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said Athens had a certain degree of flexibility on which reforms to implement but that they must “add up” to the satisfaction of European partners.

“The question is: can and will Greece fulfill the expectations that we all have?” she said during a visit to Helsinki. “There can be variation as far as which measures a government opts for, but in the end the overall framework must add up.”

Debt Relief Talks

A senior official in Brussels on Sunday had dismissed the list as “ideas” rather than a plan but Athens has not said whether it is willing to amend it much further.

Greek and other eurozone officials from the Euro Working Group are due to discuss the reforms at 1500 GMT on April 1, a Brussels source said.

A Greek finance ministry official said the list included a lowered target of 1.5 billion euros ($1.6 billion) in proceeds from asset sales this year and a proposal to set up a bad bank with bailout funds returned to the eurozone in February.

Among the scheduled asset sales is a stake in the country's biggest port, Piraeus, in which China has expressed interest.

The list also estimates Greece can raise 3.7 billion euros this year through audits of bank transfers abroad, TV license and e-gaming tenders, a value-added-tax lottery scheme, a crackdown on smuggling and the settlement of arrears owed to the state.

That package targets a primary budget surplus of 1.5 pct of national output this year -- compared to a previous target of 3 percent in Greece's EU/IMF 240 billion euros ($260 billion) bailout -- and growth of 1.4 percent in 2015, down from the bailout target of 2.9 percent, a government official said.

In a potential sign of Greece trying to shift the debate with its lender, Athens also brought up the issue of debt relief on Monday, after saying little on the issue recently although it was a centerpiece of Tsipras's pre-election campaign.

Tsipras said the lenders had agreed to start debt relief talks in June, when the bailout program expires. Greece's public debt reached more than 177 percent of national output last year.

“The solutions are known -- either there will be a haircut or it will be extended, or [repayment] will be linked to an increase in output or exports, or there will be lower interest rates,” Deputy Finance Minister Dimitris Mardas told financial daily Naftemporiki.

Despite its cash struggles, Tsipras's government remains popular with Greeks. A Macedonia University opinion poll for Skai TV shows 55.5 percent of Greeks believe the new leftist-led government's negotiating strategy is correct, while 27.5 percent say it is wrong.

In Stockholm on Monday, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development's Secretary General Angel Gurria told Reuters debt relief was not under discussion, but also ruled out a Greek exit from the eurozone.

The suggestion that a country may voluntarily exit the European Union is no longer on the cards,” he said.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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