Greece to repay last IMF loans by March, achieve primary surplus in
2023-Finance Minister
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[February 14, 2022] By
Lefteris Papadimas
ATHENS (Reuters) -Greece will repay the
final tranches of bailout loans owed to the International Monetary Fund
by the end of March, two years ahead of schedule, Finance Minister
Christos Staikouras told Reuters on Monday.
The country, which received more than 260 billion euros in bailout loans
from the European Union and the IMF during its decade-long financial
crisis, has relied solely on bond markets for its financing needs since
exiting its third bailout in 2018.
Since then, it has also made several early repayments to the IMF and now
owes 1.9 billion euros ($2.15 billion) in loans due by 2024, the last
batch of a total 28 billion euros that the Washington-based Fund
provided between 2010 and 2014.
"Greece has officially submitted a request for the full repayment of the
outstanding balance of its IMF loans. The relevant procedure has been
launched and is expected to be completed at the end of March,"
Staikouras said in an interview.
Greece remains the euro zone's most indebted nation, with public debt
seen at almost 190% of gross domestic product this year. The repayment
is expected to help Athens reduce the debt by about one percentage point
and save about 50 million euros in interest rate payments.
PRIMARY SURPLUS
Staikouras said that despite increasing spending to deal with the impact
of the COVID-19 pandemic, Greece implemented "a prudent and responsible
fiscal policy and an insightful debt issuing strategy".
He said stronger growth and higher budget revenues will allow the
country to return next year to a surplus in the primary budget, which
excludes debt servicing costs.
"Regarding 2023 onwards, we will shift towards the achievement of
realistic primary surpluses."
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Greek Finance Minister Christos Staikouras pauses during an
interview with Reuters at his office in the Finance Ministry in
Athens, Greece, December 17, 2019. Picture taken December 17, 2019.
REUTERS/Costas Baltas/File Photo
This would mark a significant step as Greece seeks to return to investment grade
status by 2023.
The European Central Bank's hawkish turn has sent Greek bond yields to their
highest levels since April 2020, with 10-year bonds now yielding around 2.5%
compared with 0.9% in September 2021. Athens plans to borrow 12 billion euros in
markets this year.
It sold 3 billion euros of a 10-year bond last month at a challenging time, as
the ECB's pandemic bond-buying stimulus scheme is set to end in March.
The conservative government expects economic growth to top 5% this year, with a
primary deficit shrinking to 1.2% of GDP from 7.3% in 2021.
Under a post bailout enhanced surveillance programme agreed in 2018, which
allows Greece's European lenders to closely monitor its fiscal progress, the
Mediterranean country needs to achieve a primary surplus of about 2% of GDP from
2023 onwards.
Staikouras said Greece has already started preparing to exit its surveillance
programme this summer.
"We have already raised the issue of the exit from it with the European
Institutions", he said.
($1 = 0.8846 euros)
(Reporting by Lefteris PapadimasEditing by Tomasz Janowski)
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