Home  »  Economy  »  Europe Agrees To Bail Out Greece

Europe Agrees To Bail Out Greece



Mar 12, 2010 18 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

Greece Financial Crisis

(Reuters) – The euro zone – the 16 member states including Greece who use the euro – has agreed a multi-billion euro bailout for heavily indebted Greece as part of a package to support the euro, the Guardian newspaper reported on Saturday.

The 16 euro zone members have agreed on “coordinated bilateral contributions” in the form of loans or loan guarantees to Greece if Athens is unable to refinance its debts and asks the European Union for help, the Guardian quoted a senior European Commission official as saying.

The agreement was reached despite strong resistance by Germany, and Berlin has played the pivotal role in organizing the deal, the paper quoted other sources as saying.

Euro zone finance ministers will finalize the package on Monday, the paper said.

The aid to be made available by the bailout could reach 25 billion euros, the paper quoted its sources as saying. Greece’s borrowing needs for the whole of 2010 total 53.2 billion euros.

Greece, laboring under a crippling debt burden, announced a 4.8 billion euro package of austerity measures last week designed to reduce its budget deficit to 8.7 percent of GDP this year from 12.7 percent in 2009.

It has been paying a high premium over benchmark European bonds to raise funds, the yield spread of 10-year Greek government paper over bunds topping 400 basis points in January.

The bailout “will be a coordinated approach of bilateral contributions … a bilateral contribution can be a loan or a loan guarantee. The guarantees will facilitate the kind of funds potentially needed in this context,” the paper quoted the senior Commission official as saying.

The agreement has been tailored to avoid breaking the ban, in the rules governing the operation of the euro currency, on a bailout for a country on the brink of bankruptcy, and to avoid a challenge by Germany’s supreme court, the official said.

The Commission is also rushing through tougher rules for the euro zone to set up rigorous “budgetary surveillance” of the 16 member states, the Guardian said. Greece has in the past provided the European Union with misleading economic statistics.

“The Greek case is a turning point for the euro zone,” the Guardian also quoted EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn as saying in an interview with it and other European papers.


  • mike3481

    Good idea, give the Junkie more drugs.

  • Tim Roesch – pseudo intellectual

    So, what do ‘we’ all think we would do if something like this happened here?

    States begin stopping welfare payments, cancelling pensions (or goin g bankrupt and being unable to pay them) and groups begin rioting…like in Greece…

    What is the plan?

    • scartissue

      Don’t know about you but if some shit like this happens here I’m hunkering down at home.

      A few trusted neighbors and I already have plans, schedules for security details, food, water ,ammo and all the domestic survival gear we think we might need.

      We even have a fallback position at a wooded piece of land a buddy owns.

      If you haven’t already done so you may want to plan for some type of meltdown, ’cause it’s coming.

      I hope for the best and prepare for the worst. :beer: :beer: :beer:

  • owl

    this is a great reason why multinational currencies cannot work. we have enough trouble here reigning in our 50 states.

    but, also, this will push euro-dominance far off down the road, giving dollar some added support into the future.

    now, we must get our house in order: spending waay down.

    elect fiscal conservatives into office immediately to prevent the end of US dominance in the world, and better yet, pray pray pray.

  • Sully

    Fuck the EU Communists.
    And the ‘American’ Communists too.

    • LechWalesa

      I appreciate your “fairness” for once

    • Sully

      Uh…OK.
      I see no reason to differentiate you from any American Communist.

    • LechWalesa

      tiens donc, moi communist avec ma petite entreprise ? jusqu’ici je croyais être 1 vache à lait dans la ferme de l’état

      mais dis donc, est qu’on ne traie pas les boucs de ton espèce dans ton université d’état ? à moins que tu ne beneficies de privilèges cachés

      donc tu es un communiste aussi, selon tes crières of course !

  • LechWalesa

    “The paper quoted a senior European Commission official as saying the 16 euro zone members had agreed on “coordinated bilateral contributions” in the form of loans or loan guarantees to Greece if Athens was unable to refinance its debts and asked the European Union for help.

    We are not aware that this is being planned,” the German ministry spokesman said, adding that Greece had not requested any aid.”

    me too,

    http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLDE62C02020100313

    the journalists are prompt to buy any “connerie”

  • LechWalesa

    a snarky analyse

    http://www.economist.com/blogs/buttonwood/2010/03/debt_markets_and_regulation

    the CDS problem isn’t quite the greek problem, it’s more the lack of currencies to pay its real debt

  • LechWalesa

    Une première étape nécessaire serait donc de centraliser le marché dans une chambre de compensation réglementée afin d’accroître la transparence des transactions

    http://www.lexpansion.com/economie/actualite-economique/les-cds-sont-ils-vraiment-coupables_228365.html

  • LechWalesa

    http://cib.natixis.com/flushdoc.aspx?id=51990

    a super analyse with diagrams that explains thecase

    recommandation to create a chamber of compensations too, and that the “sellers” of greek CDS must also have some part of the Greek loan to be allawed to play on the markets

    and the discussion and or agreements that the “guardian” failed to investigate was about that

  • Sully

    lol
    more French verbal finger painting.
    Not worth much now but, hey, maybe after you’re dead….

    • LechWalesa

      merdum, qu’est-ce qu’il a le net !

    • LechWalesa

      cé quoi le problem, je peux pas parler de la peinture ala manos !

    • LechWalesa

      t’as tord de pas profiter des cows pies, quand les boucs ne font que des crottes de lapin !

  • Tyler520

    What the article doesn’t say is that Greece is now indebted – the measures specifically stated that Greece, upon accepting the money, can no longer abandon the Euro system (without punishment) — typical cartel/mob tactics

    • LechWalesa

      Greece has always been indepted, the problem is that Germany doesn’t like that IFM would shadow its system of exportations in the euro countries, as Germany need backing of the bank for them too, and suppose that she will not get themif the euro counties can’t insure their re-pay back

      it is more complicated than you believe