EU
aides play down Greek reform plan, no early progress
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[March 09, 2015]
By Toby Sterling and Jan Strupczewski
AMSTERDAM/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Euro zone
officials played down plans submitted by cash-strapped Greece to its
international creditors in a bid to secure fresh funds, a day after
Athens' outspoken finance minister irked EU partners by raising the
prospect of a referendum.
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Speaking before finance ministers of the currency area meet in
Brussels on Monday, Eurogroup chairman Jeroen Dijsselbloem said
steps outlined by Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis in a letter last
week were serious but "far from complete".
"This is a process that's just going to take a long time," the
Dutchman said, adding that it would be very difficult to complete
Greece's reform program during the four-month extension of its
EU/IMF bailout that runs until end June.
Varoufakis, who wants a negotiated restructuring of Greece's debt to
official lenders, said in a newspaper interview published on Sunday
the leftist-led government could call a referendum or early
elections if European partners rejected its debt and growth plans.
The Finance Ministry later clarified that the Marxist former
academic had been replying to a hypothetical question and that any
referendum would "obviously regard the content of reforms and fiscal
policy" and not whether to stay in the euro.
A senior politician in German Chancellor Angela Merkel's
conservative bloc said on Monday that Greece would be better off
outside the 19-nation euro zone, suggesting that Finance Minister
Wolfgang Schaeuble privately shared that view.
"By leaving the euro zone, as Finance Minister Schaeuble has
suggested, the country could make itself competitive again from a
currency perspective with a new drachma," former transport minister
Peter Ramsauer, a member of the Bavarian Christian Social Union
(CSU), wrote in Bild.
Merkel and Schaeuble have both said publicly they want to keep
Greece in the currency area. But in a sign that German sentiment may
be shifting, Ramsauer said a temporary "Grexit" would be a "great
opportunity" for the country to boost its economy and administration
"making it fit to return to the euro area from a position of
strength".
GREEKS WANT TO STAY
German Deputy Finance Minister Steffen Kampeter said in a radio
interview he did not expect substantial decisions on Greece at
Monday's Eurogroup meeting because ministers were waiting for more
financial details on the reform plans.
He criticized Varoufakis' talk of a referendum or returning to
elections, saying it would only delay the implementation of the
economic measures Greece needed.
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An opinion poll published on Monday showed a large majority of
Greeks want Athens to reach a compromise deal with international
lenders to avoid having to leave the euro.
Some 69.6 percent of Greeks say the new leftist-led government
should look for an "honorable compromise" to resolve the crisis,
according to a Marc survey for the newspaper Efimerida Ton
Syntakton. Only 27.4 percent of those questioned wanted Greece to
refuse any compromise, even if that meant having to leave the euro
zone.
Leftist leader Alexis Tsipras won power in January promising voters
a radical renegotiation of the bailout package that requires strict
budget discipline and which has imposed wrenching austerity,
shrinking the economy by about 25 percent.
Despite rifts in his Syriza party because of concessions the
government has had to make, polls show it remains popular.
The government submitted a bill last week to offer free food and
electricity to thousands of poverty-stricken Greeks as its first
legislative act in parliament -- a symbolic move to address what it
calls a humanitarian crisis.
About 88 percent of respondents supported these initial policy
steps, according to the survey.
Shut out of debt markets and with international loans frozen against
a background of falling revenues, Greece could run out of cash later
this month.
(Additional reporting by Stephen Brown and Noah Barkin in Berlin,
Steven Scherer in Rome and Angeliki Koutantou in Athens; Writing by
Paul Taylor Editing by Jeremy Gaunt.)
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