Greek talks bid to save deal
Thursday, 9 February 2012
Prime Minister Lucas Papademos said the heads of the three parties backing his interim government received the 50-page document, drafted with the country's debt inspectors, yesterday.
A meeting of Mr Papademos with the party leaders has been moved back to give them more time to study the draft.
The talks had already been postponed for three days to make time for negotiations with the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, on whose approval the continued flow of Greece's vital €130bn (£108bn) in rescue loans depends.
Without the bailout, Greece would not have enough money to pay off a big bond redemption next month, triggering a default that could send shockwaves around the global economy.
The three organisations, known as the troika, have demanded new private sector wage and pension cuts, public sector sackings and cuts in health, pension and defence spending. The proposals have horrified unions, who held a general strike on Tuesday, as Greeks have been hit with a spate of income cuts and drastically increased taxation.
But Athens has minimal ground for manoeuvre. Without the rescue loans, the country will default on its massive debts in March, when it faces a huge bond redemption.
Disagreement still remains on the extent of those cuts between parties who face national elections in late April - after the debt deals have been sealed and implemented. The majority Socialists, main rival conservatives and the small right-wing LAOS party are also at odds over when the elections should be held.
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