Κυριακή 18 Νοεμβρίου 2012

ΑΝΑΣΚΕΛΑ Η ΚΥΡΙΑΡΧΙΑ

ΨΗΦΙΣΕ ΚΑΙ ΜΗ ΣΕ ΝΟΙΑΖΕΙ…
ΔΟΛΟΦΟΝΗΣΕ ΚΑΙ ΜΗΝ ΑΝΗΣΥΧΕΙΣ
Ο ΔΑΝΕΙΚΟΣ ΑΕΡΑΣ, ΑΝΥΠΑΡΚΤΩΝ ΧΡΗΜΑΤΩΝ-PONZI- ΕΙΝΑΙ ΕΔΩ…
ΤΡΩΓΕΤΑΙ Η ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ ΔΗΛΩΣΗ ΤΩΝ ΔΑΝΕΙΣΤΩΝ? ΘΑ ΤΗ ΔΩΣΕΤΕ πχ ΣΥΝΤΑΞΗ ΝΟΕΜΒΡΙΟΥ/ ΔΕΚΕΜΒΡΙΟΥ?

μα το οτι επαληθευομαι ......??!!!!!!!!!!Eurozone faces brinkmanship onGreeceBy Peter Spiegel in BrusselsEurozone leaders face a new round of brinkmanship over Greece’s 174bn bailout after€international lenders failed to bridge differences on how to reduce Athens’ burgeoning debtlevels, pushing the country perilously close to defaulting on a 5bn debt payment due next€week.Officials had hoped to finalise the new programme, which extends Greece’s rescue two yearsto 2016, at a meeting of eurozone finance ministers in Brussels on Monday. That would freeup a long-delayed 31.3bn aid payment desperately sought by Athens.€But accord ing to officials involved in negotiations, international lenders remain far apart on how much debtrelief for Greece is needed and who will bear the losses fromlower debt repayments. “It is absolutely clear that we will need another round after next Monday,” said one senioreurozone official involved in the talks. “There are a number of issues that still need to bewrapped up.”  Although negotiators insisted they are narrowing the differences, time may be running out.One senior official saidthe European Central Bank , which holds the 5bn in debt due next€ Friday, is resisting rolling the payment over, putting pressure on all sides to reach a dealquickly.Officials said the International Monetary Fund and the European Commission, two of threemembers of the so-called “troika” responsible for managing Greece’s bailout, are at odds overthe size and the pace of Greece’s debt reduction.The IMF remains more pessimistic about Greece’s ability to return to economic growth, theamount it will collect in its 50bn privatisation programme, and how much money is needed€to recapitalise the country’s teetering banking system. As a result, Brussels and Washington are 5-10 percentage points apart on where Greece’sdebt will stand by 2020, the target date in the rescue programme for returning Athens tosustainable debt levels.Further complicating negotiations, officials said the IMF is insisting Greek debt levels arereduced to 120 per cent of gross domestic product by 2020, while the European Commissionis urging an easing of the target to about 125 per cent by 2022.One senior official said that if negotiators are forced to accept the IMF’s stance, eurozonegovernments may have to take losses on their existing bailout loans, a politically explosiveresult that has already been rejected by Berlin and other northern eurozone countries fearfulof backlash from their national parliaments.            
 Another negotiator said the European Commission was gradually moving towards the IMFposition, meaning eurozone lenders will have to come up with even bigger amounts of debtrelief than originally planned to get the programme back on track. “There will be a need for measures that significantly reduce debt,” said the negotiator. “Everybody has red lines out there.” Eurozone officials had hoped that debt relief measures could be limited to a cut in interestrates on bailout loans – from 150 basis points to 80 points above interbank rates – plusgiving Greece the profits earned by the ECB on their 55bn in Greek debt holdings,€estimated to be between 12bn-15bn.€€Mario Draghi, the ECB president, said on Thursday he had agreed to allow the profits to bepassed back to Greece, but added he was unwilling to take further measures to help lower Athens’ debt burden, putting additional pressure on eurozone governments to take the hit. “The ECB is by and large done,” Mr Draghi said. 

Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:

Δημοσίευση σχολίου