ECONOMY

Clock ticking on Greece to repay IMF

It’s the billion-dollar question: is Greece going to repay the International Monetary Fund on time? Or will it, in the absence of a new deal with its official creditors, dare default on the global crisis lender which has joined two massive bailouts of the Greek economy? Athens is scheduled to repay $1.6 billion euros ($1.8 billion) to the IMF in four steps between now and June 19. The first payment is around 300 million euros due on Friday.

But to make those payments, Athens needs to access more funds from the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF, specifically a $7.2 billion transfer under the current Greece bailout program that has been held up for months as the two sides wrangle over the conditions tied to the money.

If the first loan repayment does not arrive on Friday night, the axe falls: Greece will be considered officially in arrears, and will not be eligible to receive any of the 16.5 billion euros in financial support that the IMF has committed to support the country through 2016.

That risks pushing the already destitute Greek economy further into the abyss.

So far the Greek government, led by the Syriza party, has left unclear whether it will make the payment, while it continues talks with creditors over the conditions for a new deal.

At the end of May, Interior Minister Nikos Voutsis warned that Athens had > to make the repayments to the IMF.

But after that the government stressed it would pay its debts, if it was in the position to do so.

As of late Wednesday, crunch talks between Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker were unable to bridge the gap between the two sides, pushing Athens ever closer to default, with the consequences of that not all clear.

But the IMF has remained stone-faced. > a Fund spokesman said last week.

One suggestion to buy time for a deal has been that Athens group all of its June IMF payments into one and deliver the money at the end of the month.

But the country has not asked to do that, a source told AFP Wednesday.

A default is definitely possible, said analysts at Commerzbank.

> they said.

> Domenico Lombardi, a former member of the IMF board, told AFP.

The shock of a default could spur the Europeans to raise the pressure on Greece, including a move by the ECB to tighten the flow of funds that have propped up Greek banks during the crisis, notes Lombardi.

> he said.

A Greek default on IMF loans would place the country among a few such countries, with the others all at least able to blame war (Afghanistan, Iraq, Yugoslavia) or a political turmoil (Haiti).

But the IMF itself would not come out unscathed. It put its credibility with its members at risk in helping arrange and manage the rescue of Greece with the largest bailout loans the Fund has ever approved.

Those loans were sharply contested inside the institution, and non-payment could renew the controversy.

But analysts do not expect a default on the IMF to lead to the disaster scenario of > — Greeces exit from the eurozone.

> said Lombardi.

Analysts at Commerzbank agreed, though less definitively.

>

[AFP]

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