Greece
and its international creditors started talks on Friday on reforms
needed to keep the country financed, increasing the possibility of a
interim compromise deal between the euro zone and Athens at a ministerial meeting on Monday. The talks between euro zone finance ministers and Greece
on Monday are key, because they are the last moment for the new Greek
government to ask for a technical extension of the current bailout
program, which runs out on Feb 28. Greece
needs such an extension to ensure continued official financing at a time
when market borrowing is too expensive for Athens and to be eligible
for negotiations on more time to repay the euro zone loans already received. But
the left-wing government of Alexis Tsipras won elections in January on
promises of ending the 240-billion euro bailout and the belt-tightening
reforms that came with it and does not want to ask for an extension,
even by a few months. "There
have been very good political debates ... and now we need to get down
to the hard facts, explaining what is in the (bailout reform) agreement
and what are the quantified results of the new Greek government's
program," a senior EU official close to the talks said. "On
Monday we expect a description of what are the overlaps between the
two, and I expect them to be non-negligible, and what are the
divergences," the official said. If Greece
wanted to remove a certain reform from the list agreed under the
bailout, it would have to propose in its place a measure that would have
a similar fiscal effect, he said. He
was echoing comments made by European Commission President Jean-Claude
Juncker after Tsipras presented his ideas to a summit of EU leaders in
Brussels on Thursday. The official noted that if Greece
did not ask for a bailout extension on Monday, the program, with the
financial cushion it provided, would expire and Athens would have to
apply for a new, fully fledged bailout - the country's third. "It's
not crucial to extend. One could also agree to start discussions on a
new program, That is a distinct possibility, I would not exclude it,"
the official said.
Greece, Troika start talks on common reform ground

Reuters
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