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German consent for helping Greece has strings attached

Published 24 March 2010
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Just ahead of an EU summit starting tomorrow (25 March), Germany signalled for the first time that it may accept European financial aid for Greece as a last resort, but only if the IMF is involved and eurozone partners accept tougher budget discipline rules.

A senior German official spelled out on 23 March Berlin's conditions for any aid mechanism ahead of an EU summit starting on Thursday:

  • Greece would have to be unable to access credit markets;
  • The International Monetary Fund would have to make a "substantial contribution" to any rescue;
  • European Union states would have to agree to negotiate "additional instruments" to enforce budget discipline, beyond existing rules that failed to prevent Athens running up huge debts and deficits that have shaken the euro zone.

A source in Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative bloc quoted her as telling lawmakers Germany would only agree to a rescue model combining bilateral and IMF assistance. There would be no decision at this week's summit but a special EU summit would be called to decide if an emergency arose.

"The condition for action, as a last resort, is that Greece's financing on the capital markets is exhausted," the senior official said.

"There are first signs from various capitals that people could envisage financial co-assistance by the IMF," he said.

European diplomats said France and Germany, co-founders of the single currency, were working on a joint position on Greece for the summit, including a possible role for the IMF, which Paris has hitherto rejected as anathema inside the euro family.

One source said Paris and Berlin had not yet reached a common position and the talks were "very sensitive".

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet and Eurogroup chairman Jean-Claude Juncker have said involving the Washington-based lender would send a damaging message that the euro zone was incapable of handling its own problems. Some senior French policymakers have said it would be a severe political setback for European integration.

"The message from Berlin is crystal clear really, which is that Greece still needs to continue not just with consolidation but to test the markets out and if necessary use the IMF," said Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays Capital.

"The implication is that Germany will support Greece only if the IMF channel does not deliver," he said.

Greece needs to refinance some 16 billion euros in maturing debt between 20 April and 23 May and is hoping that a public display of an EU emergency support mechanism, which would not need to be activated, will be enough to force down the cost.

The crisis over Greece's debt, expected to hit 120% of national output this year, and its budget deficit, which reached 12.9% of GDP last year, has shaken confidence in the euro single currency.

'Reasonable price'?

Credit ratings agency Fitch said it doubted EU leaders would offer Greece aid at the summit but failure to reach a deal would not trigger a downgrade as long as the IMF option was open.

"As long as the market is prepared to make the money available to the Greek government at any reasonable price - current rates are reasonable given circumstances although not desirable - we would have no immediate reason to change the rating," Chris Pryce, a director at Fitch Ratings, told Reuters.

That could leave Greece raising funds at market rates of more than 300 basis points over benchmark German bonds, adding an estimated 500 million euros a year to its debt service bill despite Athens' pleas for help to reduce its borrowing costs.

France and Spain called for a special meeting of leaders of the 16 nations that share the euro zone ahead of the regular two-day EU summit which opens on Thursday afternoon. The Eurogroup has held only one such summit previously, at the height of the global financial crisis in October 2008.

Merkel faces massive public opposition to any bailout ahead of a regional election in May in which her centre-right coalition's upper house majority is at stake.

Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said he expected a positive outcome and was encouraged by comments from EU institutions on ways to support Greece's efforts to cut its giant deficit and public debt.

"There must be a political mechanism to ensure the stability of the euro zone and support the efforts made by every country," he said, adding that data for the first two months of 2010 show Greek revenues rose and spending fell sharply.

The risk premium that investors charge for holding Greek debt rather than German bonds narrowed to 324 basis points from around 344 at Monday's settlement close on hopes of a deal, although it was still above last week's levels.

Diplomats said European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, who will chair Thursday's summit, was working for a compromise that would satisfy Merkel and prevent the bloc's divisions over Greece spilling into the open again and destabilising markets.

The nominee for vice-president of the European Central Bank, Vitor Constancio, pointed to a possible solution, telling a European Parliament hearing that giving Greece credit would not be an illegal bailout if the loans were not subsidised.

Papaconstantinou stressed that Greece was not bankrupt and was not going to the EU summit as a beggar.

"We want to play by eurozone rules. Greece has full access to financial markets as it proved with its recent 10-year bond sale. Obviously, we would like the spreads to fall but I believe this will gradually happen as the stability programme is implemented," he said.

(EurActiv with Reuters.)

Positions: 

"Game, set and match for Merkel – Greece will have to go to the IMF," reads a Eurointelligence headline.

The blog, specialised in EU financial affairs, quotes a number of authoritative sources on the topic of Merkel's strategy vis-à-vis the Greek case.

According to the daily Frankfurter Allgemeine, the outlines of the deal at tomorrow's EU summit are clear.

"If Greece needs money, it will need to go to the IMF, while euro area member states could top it up voluntarily. Merkel can return from the summit saying that Germany is not paying for Greece, Greece gets the money when it needs it. The big debate is still the rules of engagement for the IMF, but this is probably a solvable problem," the daily writes.

The weekly Der Spiegel agrees that Merkel is likely to emerge as the winner on Thursday, as the others are already caving in to their IMF position. Der Spiegel writes that whatever declaration is signed on Thursday, there will be no money from Germany. (Until 9 May, it will be politically important for Germany to declare that it is paying no money to Greece. Greece will have to default before Germany starts to act).

Financial Times Deutschland does not share the German press' enthusiasm for Merkel's EU bashing. It leads with the story that Merkel is playing risky games with the financial markets. In his FTD column, Wolfgang Munchau says she should not underestimate the consequences of another declaration of warm words. The markets will see through her position – which is that she will simply not pay a cent, ever.

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Next steps: 
  • 25-26 March: EU summit to take decisions of how to help Greece.
Background: 

Greece is sitting on debts that are expected to hit 290 billion euro this year and has a budget deficit of 12.7% of gross domestic product, more than four times the EU limit. 

The cost of servicing that debt has risen, hitting the euro currency and prompting speculation over a bailout plan (EurActiv 04/02/10).

European leaders sought to prop up Greece with words of support at a summit on 11 February but failed to offer concrete proposals to help the country, citing "strategic" reasons (EurActiv 11/02/10).

On 3 March, Greece unveiled a draconian 4.8 billion euro austerity programme targeted at civil servants, the rich and the church in a move designed to secure European help in tackling its crippling debt burden (EurActiv 04/03/10).

Finance ministers from the 16-country euro zone agreed on 15 March to mobilise financial aid for Greece rapidly if needed, but revealed little of how their standby plan for the debt-stricken nation would work (EurActiv 16/03/10).

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who faces a key state election in May, is keenly aware that the German electorate overwhelmingly opposes a bailout for Greece and had hardened her line against the EU making a concrete pledge of financial support (EurActiv 22/03/10).

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