Judge to lead Greece in emergency Government
Greece put a senior judge in charge of an emergency Government yesterday
to lead it to new elections on June 17.In a sharp blow to confidence, sources
at the European Central Bank it had halted liquidity operations
with some Greek banks because their capital had been too far depleted.The move
would mean those banks are no longer able to park assets at the ECB in return
for cash, and would have to seek costlier emergency financing from the Bank of
Greece.It was not clear which banks, or how many of them, were affected. One
person familiar with the matter said the capital of four Greek banks was so
depleted they were operating with negative equity capital.Greeks have been
withdrawing hundreds of millions of euros (dollars) from banks in recent days
as the prospect of the country being forced out of the European Union's common
currency zone seems ever more real - although there has so far been no sign of
a run on bank branches in Athens.European leaders who once denied vociferously
that they were fretting over Greece leaving their currency union have given up
pretence.Asked if he was concerned about a Greek exit, European Central Bank
chief Mario Draghi said simply: "No comment".Political leaders failed
to form a government following an inconclusive parliamentary election on May 6,
leaving the state with its coffers almost empty and no elected cabinet in place
to satisfy lenders it deserves the money needed to stay afloat.President
Karolos Papoulias, whose powers as head of state are limited, named supreme
administrative court head Panagiotis Pikrammenos as caretaker prime minister.He
will have no power to take political decisions, only to carry Greece into the
vote.The parliament that was elected on May 6 will convene today and be
immediately dissolved, a presidency source said.The interim leader is little
known. State television said he was born in 1945 and studied law in Athens and Paris. A court source said
he would name as few ministers as possible."Thank you for your trust, and
I believe that I am worthy of this mission," Pikrammenos said at a meeting
with the president. "This is purely a caretaker government. However, it
escapes no one that our country is going through difficult times."He
repeated a joke he said he had read in the press, that his own name, which
translates as "sorrowful" in English, made him suited to be the last
prime minister of a political era.Leftists
lead A new poll confirmed what other surveys have shown: that radical
leftists who reject a bailout agreed with the EU and IMF are poised for
victory, and the two establishment parties that agreed the rescue are sinking
further after an historic wipeout 10 days ago.The leftists argue they can tear
up the bailout and keep the euro, but European leaders say if Greece fails to
meet promises to them, lenders will pull the plug on financing, driving Athens
to bankruptcy and a swift exit from the EU single currency.On Monday, according
to an official account, the president told party chiefs that figures from the
central bank headed by George Provopoulos showed savers had withdrawn up to 800
million euros ($1 billion) from banks."Mr. Provopoulos told me there was
no panic, but there was great fear that could develop into a panic," the
president was quoted as saying in minutes of a meeting that failed to yield
agreement on a cabinet."Withdrawals and outflows by 4 pm when I called him
exceeded 600 million euros and reached 700 million euros," he said.
"He expects total outflows of about 800 million euros, including
conversions into German Bunds and other such things."Several banking
sources told Reuters similar amounts had also been withdrawn on Tuesday.
Nevertheless, there was no sign of panic or queues at bank branches in Athens on Wednesday. Bankers
dismissed suggestions that a bank run was looming.A senior executive at a large
Greek bank: "There is no bank run, no queues or panic. The
situation is better than I expected. The amount of deposit withdrawals the
president mentioned referred to three days, not one."Still, some were
taking no risks. A 60-year-old textiles store owner who gave his name only as
Nasos said he had transferred 10,000 euros over the phone to a bank in fellow
eurozone state Cyprus on Tuesday afternoon."Any way you see it, things are difficult. If
they call elections on June 17 - then everyone will take their money out on the
Friday." That June 17 date was later confirmed.Charles Dallara, chief
negotiator for the body representing private sector holders of Greek bonds,
said there had been "a pickup in deposit flight from Greece".Dallara,
who as head of the International Institute of Finance spent months negotiating
the largest ever sovereign debt restructuring, said a Greek exit from the euro
zone would be "somewhere between catastrophic and Armageddon" for
Europe.
Merkel, Hollande promise joint growth strategy
New French President Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela
Merkel have acknowledged differences over how to boost growth in
recession-plagued Europe, but pledged to forge a joint approach in time for an
EU summit next month.The Socialist Hollande jetted to Berlin yesterday only
hours after being sworn in to meet Merkel, a conservative, for the first time,
arriving over an hour late after his plane was hit by lightning and he was
forced to return briefly to Paris.The meeting was being closely watched for
signs the leaders of Europe's biggest economies will be able to move beyond a
war of words over how to resolve the debt crisis that now threatens to tear apart
the 13-year-old currency bloc.Hollande sharply criticised Merkel during his
election campaign for insisting on tough austerity to bring down suffocating
debt levels across the euro zone. She in turn had backed Hollande's rival,
conservative incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy.Supported by others in southern Europe,
Hollande has vowed to shift the focus to growth and reopen a tough new set of
budget rules that Merkel and other EU leaders agreed to adopt earlier this year
- a step considered taboo in Berlin."I said it during my election campaign
and I say it again now as president that I want to renegotiate what has been
agreed to include a growth dimension," Hollande told a joint news
conference with Merkel at the Chancellery in the German capital.Merkel's five-year
double act with Sarkozy earned the duo the moniker "Merkozy" for
their close cooperation during Europe's debt crisis. The new Franco-German
couple - referred to by some as "Merkollande" - took care to play
down their differences on Tuesday, hoping to send a signal of unity at a time
when speculation is growing that Greece may have to exit the
euro zone and return to the drachma."Growth has to feed through to the
people. And that's why I'm happy that we'll discuss different ideas on how to
achieve growth," Merkel said.They said the goal was to present joint
proposals at a European Union summit in late June.Growth pact Instead of reopening Merkel's
"fiscal compact", they are expected to complement it with a new
"growth pact".Berlin has already signalled it is open to several
ideas favoured by Hollande, including more flexible use of EU structural aid, a
bigger role for the European Investment Bank and the introduction of
"project bonds" to foster investments in infrastructure like
transportation and energy networks.But most economists agree that these steps
will make little difference to countries like Greece, which is in its fifth
year of recession and has seen unemployment surge to 22 percent.That means
Germany is likely to come under pressure to take additional steps, like giving
struggling euro countries more time to reduce their deficits, a step it has so
far resisted for fear of spooking jittery financial markets.Although the
reserved Merkel learned over time to work with the impulsive Sarkozy, her advisers
often complained about his erratic behaviour and some believe she will
ultimately form a closer bond with the more outwardly cautious Hollande.The two
were born less than a month apart, grew up in religious households and both
scorn the flashy styles of their more charismatic predecessors, Sarkozy and
Gerhard Schroeder.Hollande noted that French and German leaders of different
political stripes had a long history of working well together to promote the
common European project, referring to Schroeder and Jacques Chirac, as well as
to Helmut Kohl and Francois Mitterrand, and Helmut Schmidt and Valery Giscard
d'Estaing.After the news conference, the two leaders dined on lamb schnitzel
and asparagus on the eighth floor of the Chancellery, overlooking the Tiergarten
park and the Reichstag parliament building. Aides said they had a broad
conversation on topics ranging from economic and foreign policy to bilateral
issues.Hollande later flew back to Paris. He is due in Washington later in the week to
meet US President Barack Obama ahead of G8 and NATO summits at Camp David and Chicago.Hollande finds himself
in the hot seat from day one. Earlier on Tuesday, Greece abandoned a nine-day
hunt for a government and called a new election that could hand victory next
month to leftists opposed to the terms of the country's EU/IMF bailout.A
growing number of policymakers in Europe have warned over the past week that if
Greece does not stick to the budget cuts and structural reforms agreed with its
international lenders, it may have no future in the currency bloc.Both Merkel
and Hollande said they wanted Athens to remain a part of the euro project and
stood ready to explore ways to support the Greek economy so it could return to
growth: "Like Mrs. Merkel, I want Greece to remain in the euro zone,"
Hollande said.
No comments:
Post a Comment