Bloomberg
February 20, 2015
In an 18 against 1 negotiation, it was always likely that the 18 (the Eurogroup) were going to come off better than the 1 (Greece).
Greece got enough, but only enough, to stop them walking out again.
Here's how it breaks down:
- The Eurogroup gets to keep European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund - 'the troika' - oversight of the program extension. Greece gets to have everyone not call it the troika anymore.
- The Eurogroup has Greece agreement on an extension of the existing bailout program. Greece has Eurogroup agreement not to call it a program anymore.
- The Eurogroup gives Greece until Monday to come up with a set of budgetary measures that will allow a successful review of the program extension. Greece gets to pick its own austerity. (And eventually it may get flexibility on reducing its primary budget surplus)
- The Eurogroup gets to ringfence the EFSF (European Financial Stability Fund) money in the HFSF (Hellenic Financial Stability Fund) buffer, so that it is only available for bank recapitalization at the discretion of the ECB. Greece gets to watch this happen.
- The Eurogroup gets to have a quiet weekend. Greece gets to work really hard on a set of measures that the troika institutions must approve by Monday evening.
No comments:
Post a Comment