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来源类型 | Opinion |
规范类型 | 评论 |
The Troika and Syriza Must Remove Roadblocks Together | |
Miranda Xafa; Miranda Xafa | |
发表日期 | 2017-04-19 |
出处 | 2017 |
语种 | 英语 |
摘要 | ![]() Tsipras. (Flickr Creative Commons Photo/Piazza del Popolo)
On 7 April in Malta, euro-area finance ministers agreed on the key elements of a deal that would unlock further financial assistance to Greece under the current (third) €86 billion bailout. The “in principle” agreement came as a huge relief, as Greece will be unable to meet the €7.4 billion in debt payments due in July without external financing. German voters hold the purse stringsFor this to happen, Eurogroup ministers need to decide the fiscal targets that Greece must meet over the medium term, as well as the debt relief that will be provided after the program is successfully concluded in 2018. The two are obviously linked; any easing of the primary surplus target beyond 2020, as demanded by the IMF, would need to be accompanied by deeper debt relief to keep the debt burden sustainable. With German elections due in September, and with the country’s voters hostile to the idea of cutting Greece more slack, the debt-relief proposals likely to be agreed upon will be the minimum necessary to keep the IMF on board. Final decisions may go down to the wire if staff-level agreement is delayed, if Greek parliament does not approve the measures, or if European creditors cannot agree on the debt-relief parameters. Reality check for TsiprasIt’s not uncommon for Greece to seek a scapegoat, the latest ones being the usual suspects: the IMF and German finance minister Wolfgang Schӓuble, who make “unreasonable demands”, as well as various local players allegedly undermining the government. If Syriza has learned anything since taking office, it is that policy-making is much harder than opposing someone else’s agenda. The protracted negotiations have helped Tsipras gain his party’s approval for the pension and tax reform, but they have also taken a toll on the economy, which returned to recession in the last quarter of 2016. Liquidity is drying up as the government accumulates domestic arrears to meet external debt payments, and with Greek banks suffering large deposit withdrawals. A deal with creditors needs to be struck soon to help restore confidence and restart growth. This article first appeared in World Economic Forum. |
主题 | Summits & Institutions, Trade & Finance |
子主题 | Central Banking & International Finance$Global Politics & Foreign Policy$Management of Severe Sovereign Debt Crises |
URL | https://www.cigionline.org/articles/troika-and-syriza-must-remove-roadblocks-together |
来源智库 | Centre for International Governance Innovation (Canada) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/183803 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Miranda Xafa,Miranda Xafa. The Troika and Syriza Must Remove Roadblocks Together. 2017. |
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