But far bigger sticking points on wages and spending cuts remain unresolved, and Venizelos warned that the stakes were rising as time ran out. "We are on a knife-edge," he told reporters. "The distance between the successful completion of the procedures and an impasse which could happen by accident or because of a misunderstanding is very small." Eurozone officials said ministers had bluntly said they would not sign off on a planned debt swap until Athens guaranteed it would implement promised reforms. "There was a very clear message ... to the Greeks that enough is enough," one eurozone official said. "There is a great sense of frustration that they are dragging their feet." Athens' talks with its international lenders have stumbled over their demands, which include cutting labour costs by axing holiday bonuses and lowering the minimum wage - proposals vehemently opposed by Greek political party chiefs. Greek officials have described the negotiations as tough, with the troika of European Central Bank, European Union and IMF lenders unwilling to yield an inch from their demands. The talks have moved slowly also because the troika wants agreement on all parts of the complex Greek rescue deal -- including any contribution by public creditors like the ECB -- before approving the bailout, a source close to the talks said. Athens also wants public creditors like the ECB to take part in the bond swap deal, under which banks and insurers will take real losses of about 70 percent on the Greek debt they hold in a bid to ease Greece's debt burden by 100 billion euros. The bond swap talks were now the easier part of the overall process to save Greece, said Venizelos. Representatives for the banks and insurers were expected to continue talks in Athens over the weekend. The debt swap and bailout was designed to bring Greece's debt down to the targeted 120 percent of GDP level by 2020, but with Greece's economic prospects deteriorating, fears have grown that European partners will need to stump up more money. EU sources say eurozone governments may now have to cough up an extra 15 billion euros on top of the 130 billion already agreed. The lenders have demanded extra spending cuts worth about 1 percent of GDP - or just above 2 billion euros - this year, including big cuts in defence and healthcare spending. They also want all Greek political leaders - who are keen not to be linked directly with the painful reforms as they gear up for elections expected in April - to endorse the measures, irrespective of the outcome at the polls. (Reuters) |
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