Greece nears aid revival as Samaras wins EU summit praise
Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras moved closer to winning a delayed aid disbursement when European leaders praised his government?s budget-cutting push.
At his first European Union summit since becoming premier in June, Samaras said record unemployment showed the price Greece was paying for austerity demanded by the euro area as a condition for emergency loans. He urged parallel steps to kick- start the economy and stuck to a request for two extra years until 2016 to meet targets for narrowing the budget deficit, prompting signs of European goodwill.
?We welcome the determination of the Greek government to deliver on its commitments and we commend the remarkable efforts by the Greek people,? the 16 other euro-area leaders said in a statement released about 3 a.m. on Friday in Brussels after the first session of the EU meeting. ?Good progress has been made to bring the adjustment program back on track.?
The Samaras government has been negotiating with the euro area and IMF over 13.5 billion euros of austerity measures for 2013 and 2014 needed to qualify for the release of more loan instalments. Transfers have been frozen since June.
The next aid payout is scheduled to total 31 billion euros, most of which would be to recapitalize banks. That disbursement would be under a 130 billion-euro rescue package approved earlier this year after an initial 110 billion-euro bailout in 2010.
Creditors that also include the International Monetary Fund are loosening the budget noose on Greece as its recession heads for a sixth year in 2013, domestic anti-bailout parties gain in popularity and the jobless rate reaches 25 percent. At stake is whether Samaras? shaky coalition can pay its bills, recapitalize domestic banks and stay in the 17-nation euro.
The softening in attitude was symbolized earlier this month when Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, the biggest European backer of rescue pledges totaling 240 billion euros for Greece since 2010, made her first visit to Athens since Europe?s debt crisis erupted three years ago.
Greece narrowed its budget deficit from more than 15 percent of gross domestic product in 2009 — five times the EU limit — to 9.1 percent in 2011. The spending gap is due to shrink to about 7 percent of GDP this year.
?We expect Greece to continue budgetary and structural policy reforms and we encourage its efforts to ensure swift implementation of the program,? the euro-area leaders said. ?These conditions will allow Greece to achieve renewed growth and will ensure its future in the euro area.?
EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said he expected Greece to win the green light for the next disbursement within a month.
?I?m confident that we will be able to come to a positive conclusion of this review,? Rehn told Bloomberg Television in Brussels on Thursday. ?I expect that this will happen in the early part of November, before mid-November.?
[Bloomberg]