European leaders are unconvinced that the Greek government's austerity efforts will produce quick results. Greece's fate is now likely to be decided at the EU summit in October. The country's European partners will have to choose among a number of equally unattractive alternatives
They embraced, slapped each other on the shoulder and called each other "my friend." When Jean-Claude Juncker, the prime minister of Luxembourg and president of the Euro Group, met with Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras at Samaras' office in Athens last Wednesday, the mood was convivial -- but only for the TV cameras.
Samaras now has two to three weeks left to put together an austerity package worth about €14 billion ($17.5 billion) for the next two years. The Greek leader is promising to privatize state-owned businesses, cut government jobs and collect taxes more efficiently. But politicians in Berlin and Brussels doubt whether his new course will produce results quickly enough.
Showdown in Brussels
The troika of the European Commission, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will spend the entire month of September auditing the books in Athens. Whether the report will be finished by the time the euro-zone finance ministers meet on Oct. 8 is already debatable. Meanwhile, staff at the European Council in Brussels are assuming that the summit of European Union leaders on Oct. 18-19 will be a showdown over Greece.
The IMF is taking a particularly hard line in the negotiations. The fund's envoys feel that Greece's debts are not sustainable and are threatening to withdraw from the aid program altogether. The only alternative is for the public creditors, in particular the European Central Bank (ECB), to write off a portion of Greece's debt.
The German government faces a dilemma. Chancellor Angela Merkel had made IMF participation a condition of any Greek bailout, but if public-sector creditors agreed to a debt haircut, it would cost Germany many billions of euros.
For Merkel, that is out of the question, as is a third aid package or extending the current program by two years, as Samaras has requested. Both of the latter two options would cost additional money, and that, the chancellor fears, is something members of her own party, the Christian Democratic Union, and its coalition partners, Bavaria's Christian Social Union (CSU) and the business-friendly Free Democrats (FDP), would refuse to support in the German parliament, the Bundestag.
Small Concessions
At most, the chancellor can imagine small concessions. It is conceivable that one or the other tranche to Greece will be increased within the existing aid program, say government experts -- but only if subsequent payments are reduced accordingly.
An official likens the method to trying to stay warm under a blanket that's too short: When you pull the blanket up to your neck, your feet become exposed.
The scenario of a Greek withdrawal from the euro is looming. Task forces throughout the euro zone are trying to figure out what would happen next. There is one such task force at the European Central Bank (ECB), one at the German central bank, the Bundesbank, and one at the German Finance Ministry. All three come to the same conclusion: Nobody really knows for sure.
Athens has received the message that Berlin, Helsinki and The Hague believe a "Grexit" could be absorbed economically. This has prompted conservative Prime Minister Samaras to try a new strategy: stoking fears of a wave of impoverished migrants. Should his country become destabilized as a result of leaving the euro, says Samaras, the rest of Europe could see a tsunami of refugees.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/fate-of-greece-will-be-decided-at-eu-summit-in-october-a-852213.html
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