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Monday, November 12, 2012
Euro Finance Ministers to Discuss Greece’s Future
BRUSSELS — Greece‘s international lenders have prepared a “positive” report on the country’s reform efforts – a crucial step in its efforts to secure the next installment of its bailout loan, the head the of group of finance ministers from the 17 euro countries said Monday. Jean-Claude Juncker, head of the eurogroup and also prime minister of Luxembourg, said one important issue remains unresolved: how much time Greece will be given to reduce its debts to a manageable level. Juncker said eurozone finance ministers meeting Monday evening in Brussels would discuss whether Greece should be given extra time to cut its debt to a sustainable level of 120 percent of its gross domestic product beyond the original deadline of 2020. Still, Juncker said, the report – prepared by the so-called troika of international lenders, composed of the IMF, the European Central Bank, and the European Commission, which is the European Union‘s executive branch – will show that Greece has made impressive efforts to implement the needed reforms. (MORE: Will Obama Make Wall Street Pay for Its Support of Romney?) “The basis is positive because the Greeks have really delivered,” he said. The issue of Greece’s debt is a divisive and important one. If Greece’s debts can’t be reduced to a level where it no longer relies on further international bailouts, then the (EURO)240 billion ($305 billion) in bailout loans already agreed for Greece will have been wasted. Current projections suggest Greece is way off from reaching its 2020 debt-to-GDP deadline. Greece has been asking for more time to implement reforms and budget cuts – hoping that a slower pace will release the stranglehold such cuts have on the economy. Without growth, Greece can’t ever hope to collect enough in taxes to put a dent in its debts. But easing up on the timeline will cost more money, and politicians are nervous they won’t be able to sell that to voters. Some countries are also irritated that Greece has consistently missed the deadlines set for it. Many economists have argued that
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