Greece
tapped reserves at IMF to make debt repayment: government officials
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[May 12, 2015]
ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece tapped
emergency reserves in its holding account at the International Monetary
Fund to make a crucial 750 million euro ($839 million) debt payment to
the Fund on Monday, two government officials said on Tuesday.
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With Athens close to running out of cash and a deal with its
international creditors still elusive, there had been doubts whether
the leftist-led government would pay the IMF or opt to save cash to
pay salaries and pensions later this month.
Member countries of the IMF have two accounts at the fund - one
where their annual quotas are deposited and a holding account which
may be used for emergencies.
One official told Reuters that Athens used about 650 million euros
from the holding account to make the payment.
"We made use of money in our holding account in the fund," the
official said, declining to be named. "The government also used
about 100 million of its cash reserves."
Made a day early, the payment calmed immediate fears of a Greek
default, but Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said on Monday the
liquidity situation was "terribly urgent" and a deal to release
further funds was needed in the next couple of weeks.
A second Greek official said on Tuesday that the reserves the
government tapped must be replenished in the IMF account in "several
weeks."
Following legislative changes, Greece has meanwhile gathered 600
million euros of local government and other public entity money to
help it deal with the cash crunch, the government's spokesman said
on Tuesday.
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Euro zone finance ministers said on Monday that more work was needed
to reach a cash-for-reform deal between Athens and the IMF, the
European Commission and the European Central Bank.
Created in 1945, the IMF is accountable to the 188 countries that
make up its near-global membership. Each member is assigned a quota,
based on its relative size in the world economy, which determines
its contribution to the fund's financial resources.
(1 dollar = 0.8943 euro)
(Reporting by Lefteris Papadimas and George Georgiopoulos; editing
by John Stonestreet)
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