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The new arrangement would allow Ireland to make interest-only payments at lower average rates until the bonds mature and must be repaid in full. This would reduce Ireland's repayments by more than
euro1 billion ($1.35 billion) annually, making it easier for Ireland to meet its deficit-cutting targets more quickly. The deal also would remove a threat to the stability of Kenny's coalition government. Lawmakers in the smaller party in the coalition, Labour, had threatened to withdraw support if Ireland made the next
euro3.06 billion ($4.1 billion) payment due next month. Ireland's deficit soared to a modern European record of 31 percent in 2010 because of its bank-bailout efforts, a bill that wrecked the state's own credit rating and forced Ireland to negotiate a
euro67.5 billion ($91 billion) credit line from EU partners and the International Monetary Fund. That bailout agreement required Ireland to cut spending and raise taxes annually through at least 2015, the target for restoring its deficit to the 3 percent limit. The bailout loans will run out next year, by which time Ireland hopes to be borrowing normally on bond markets again at affordable rates. The Irish plan would transfer IBRC's property portfolio to Ireland's other "bad bank," the National Assets Management Agency or NAMA, which was formed in 2010 to try to contain Ireland's financial crisis by removing the biggest defaulting loans from the books of commercial banks. But NAMA's rapid-fire acquisition of toxic debts backfired, forcing banks to record massive property losses in one fell swoop. Five of the country's six domestically owned banks had to be nationalized to prevent their imminent collapse, and Anglo and Irish Nationwide were closed down. NAMA is tasked with gradually selling off its portfolio of homes, apartments, shopping centers, half-built developments and derelict construction sites over the next decade. The vast bulk of its assets have no buyers today because Ireland's property market soared to crazy heights on the back of cheap eurozone credit, then collapsed in 2008 amid the global credit crunch. Irish property values have slumped by more than 50 percent over the past five years and are expected to fall further.
[Associated
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