11 May 2015 | 15:05

Greece to plead leeway as IMF cash crunch looms

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 Greece will plead for leeway from an unwavering Europe on Monday, in a fresh effort to free up cash after months of deadlock in bailout talks, AFP reports.


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 Greece will plead for leeway from an unwavering Europe on Monday, in a fresh effort to free up cash after months of deadlock in bailout talks, AFP reports.

The eurozone's 19 ministers meet in Brussels one day before Greece must pay a 750 million euro ($840 million) debt bill to the IMF that some fear the Mediterranean nation cannot afford.

But Greece's partners are unswayed by the threat of financial catastrophe in Athens, ruling out any chance of imminent compromise that could unlock even a portion of the money still owed from its bailout.

"We have made progress, but we are not very close to an agreement," said the head of the Eurogroup ministers, Dutch Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem, in an interview at the weekend.

"We need more time," he said.

Led by Germany, eurozone ministers demand that Greece impose a rigorous regime of reforms, which the leftist government in Athens, in power since January, has so far baulked at adopting.

With no overall deal in sight, officials said Greece is hoping for a "positive statement" on negotiations that will allow for a section of 7.2 billion euros ($8.1 billion) in remaining bailout loans to be released.

The symbolic gesture would also help persuade the European Central Bank to keep emergency funds flowing to Greece's fragile banks at the current pace.

"We want a clear confirmation of the progress that has been made" in the talks, Greece's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras told a cabinet meeting on Sunday.

No one outside the Greek government knows for sure how long Athens can go without a deal to end Greece's 240 billion euro bailout, which began in 2010 and expires at the end of June.

Athens faces a harrowing repayment schedule over the coming weeks.

In June alone, Greece owes another 1.5 billion euros to the International Monetary Fund and it owes another three billion euros to the ECB in July and August.

According to sources in Athens, the loan repayment due on Tuesday to the IMF will be honoured on schedule.

    'Slide into insolvency' 

 Greece has been squeezing funds from the central and local governments to be able to meet its payments, but mayors are beginning to resist.

"Experience elsewhere in the world has shown that a country can suddenly slide into insolvency," Wolfgang Schaeuble, the powerful German finance minister, warned on Sunday.

Greek officials went on a frenetic diplomatic offensive last week, with the flamboyant Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis making stops in Paris, Brussels, Rome and Madrid to drum up support for his beleaguered nation.

Tsipras spoke three times by phone to Europe's most powerful leader, Germany's Angela Merkel, and he repeated calls to Jean-Claude Juncker, the wily head of the European Commission.

"After weeks of painful negotiation, if the other side is willing, it will become apparent that... the deal is very close and will be sealed in the coming period," Euclid Tsakalotos, one of Greece's main negotiators, said Sunday.

Sitting in for Greece at the Eurogroup will be Varoufakis, whose exuberant style and propensity to lecture has made fellow ministers bristle.

Varoufakis was thought to have been sidelined as negotiator after the last eurozone meeting ended sourly, and officials in Brussels are unanimous that a new team has calmed the waters.

Tsipras, whose Syriza party swept to power on an anti-austerity platform, has called for an "honourable compromise," and the government reportedly plans a number of concessions to win over its creditors.

According to reports, these include a new unified valued added tax (VAT) rate of 16 percent for several goods and services currently taxed at 13 percent.

The new VAT rate, along with a restriction on early retirement and an unpopular property tax, would enable the government to raise an additional five to six billion euros.

But since day one of these talks, bargaining has been complicated by conflicting messages from Athens on how much the government is prepared to compromise.

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