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Athens Macedonian News Agency: News in English, 16-05-23
CONTENTS
[01] IMF says Greece needs significant debt restructuring, primary
surplus targets unsustainable
[01] IMF says Greece needs significant debt restructuring, primary
surplus targets unsustainable
The International Monetary Fund on Monday said that Greece needed a
significant extension of debt maturity (and grace period) combined
with a freeze of interest rates. In a report on debt sustainability,
the IMF said that Greece cannot sustain a primary surplus of 3.2 pct of
GDP beyond 2018 and recommended that a target of 1.5 pct of GDP should
be set instead, while it reiterated that a debt restructuring agreement
should be completed by the end of the programme in 2018.
The Fund's recommendations will lead to a reduction of the public debt to
around 100 pct of GDP by 2060. In net present value terms, the measures
recommended by the IMF would lead to a benefit of around 50 pct of GDP,
of which 18-24 pct of GDP (around 31-45 billion euros) will result from
a readjustment of interest rates and the remaining benefit will result
from extending debt maturity. The IMF noted that without the proposed
restructuring Greece's public debt will soar to 250 pct of GDP.
The measures recommended included a reprofiling of existing loans,
necessary to cut funding needs to 20 pct by 2040. In this framework,
the Fund recommends an extension of repaying loans received by the EFSF
(130.9 billion euros) by 14 years, another 10 years for the loans received
from ESM (186 billion) and another 30 year of bilateral loans from EU
countries (52.9 billion).
The IMF also recommends extending a grace period for ESM loans by
six years and a 17-20 year extension of EFSF and bilateral loans,
respectively. This action would cut the funding needs by 17 pct of GDP by
2040 and by 24 pct by 2060. The Fund also recommends a reduction in the
margin (0.5 pct) added on a floating interest rate in bilateral loans
and introducing an 1.5 pct ceiling on interest rates for the other two
types of loans by 2040. This would reduce public debt by 53 pct of GDP
by 2040 and by 151 pct by 2060 and the country's funding needs by 22
pct by 2040 and 39 pct by 2060, safeguarding debt sustainability.
The IMF significantly reduced privatization proceed targets to 5.0
billion euros.
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