Greece: Softening attitudes point to “muddling through” rather than Grexit solution
South Africa is masterful in muddling through its complex issues. Europe looks to be opting for the same course in its impasse with errant EU member Greece. After confrontation caused a dramatic early walkout in negotiations this week, both sides seem to be softening their attitudes. For its part Greece is running out of money and needs an emergency lifeline or the State won't be able to pay salaries in April. On the EU's side, "Grexit" is sure to have unpleasant unintended consequences. Investec's Michael Power offered some sage insights in an interview this week. His views seem to be shared in unexpected places. Making muddling through the most likely result of the current conflict. Until the next crisis. – AH
While European officials worked frantically with Athens to find a formula, the European Central Bank agreed on Wednesday to raise emergency funding for Greek banks, a person familiar with the ECB talks said. But the amount was enough to cover their needs for only a week if nervous Greeks keep pulling their deposits out at the current rate.
Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis expressed optimism that an impasse with fellow euro zone governments could be broken by the end of the week, saying he hoped a proposal to be submitted by Athens on Thursday would gain acceptance including from Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who heads the Eurogroup of the bloc's finance ministers.
With the bailout due to expire at the end of this month, Schaeuble has poured scorn on suggestions that Athens could negotiate an extension of euro zone funding without making any promises to push on with budget cuts and economic reforms.
Greece's finances are in peril. It is burning through its cash reserves and could run out of money by the end of March without fresh funds, a person familiar with the figures said. The source said Athens had enough to repay a 1.5 billion euro ($1.7 billion) instalment to the International Monetary Fund next month but would struggle to pay public sector salaries and pensions in April.
TIDING BANKS OVER FOR A WEEK
Likewise its banks are dependent on the Emergency Liquidity Assistance scheme which is controlled by the ECB and provides funding as Greeks pull out their deposits, fearing Athens will impose capital controls to limit withdrawals — or that the country might even crash out of the common currency.
The ECB agreed on Wednesday to raise a cap on funding available under the scheme to 68.3 billion euros, a person familiar with the ECB talks said.
Whether other finance ministers in the 19-nation currency bloc, who rejected such ideas at a meeting on Monday, accept the request as a basis to resume negotiations will depend on how it is formulated, an EU source said. The wording has to match EU legal texts to win approval in several euro zone parliaments.
BRINKMANSHIP
The Athens government released documents on Wednesday indicating it was taking a more flexible line to placate euro zone creditors than its anti-bailout rhetoric at home has suggested. They showed Varoufakis had offered to accept conditions on an extension to its loan agreements and even an inspection by the European Commission at a fraught meeting in Brussels on Monday. – REUTERS