Friday, November 9, 2012

Germany sees no quick deal on Greek aid: Wolfgang Schaeuble

HAMBURG: German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Thursday he did not expect any quick deal on aid to debt-mired Greece with its international creditors.


"At the moment I do not see the decisions being taken" that are necessary for a definitive accord between the troika of international auditors examining Greece's finances and the Greek government, he said.

The German minister added that this was unlikely "in the coming weeks" despite sweeping austerity measures passed by the Greek parliament late on Wednesday.

Schaeuble, who with Chancellor Angela Merkel has shaped the response to the Greek debt turmoil in Germany, Europe's biggest economy and the eurozone's effective paymaster, nevertheless welcomed the cutbacks.

The Greeks have "a pro-European majority and it held last night despite demonstrations and a general strike," he told a conference in the northern city of Hamburg.

"All is not lost -- all is not won either but we have no use for cynicism... the Greeks want to remain in the euro."

Schaeuble said the trend in Greece was clearly going in the right direction but that external challenges would make the crisis harder to resolve.

"We are on the way to solving the problems step-by-step," he said.

"On the other hand we have weaker growth in the global economy as a whole and that weighs on our ability to grapple with the euro crisis."

Schaeuble said that the countries using the euro had a "certain confidence bonus on the markets" but noted it remained "fragile".

"We need to deliver," he warned. The Greek parliament approved 18.5 billion euros ($23.6 billion) in budget cuts demanded by its creditors, full of bitter pills for average Greeks.

The tough measures to be implemented by 2016 include raising the retirement age to 67, slashing benefits and cutting the minimum wage.

The package is necessary for Greece to receive a 31.5-billion-euro tranche of aid from its international creditors -- the European Union, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle had earlier on Thursday welcomed the austerity package, calling it "an important affirmation of the consolidation and reform policies that are needed".

indiatimes.com

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