The agreement in terms of aid to Greece on track
After many twists and turns, Greece is on track to reach agreement with its private and public creditors on Monday. After Jean-Claude Juncker, the leader of the euro area, which showed his confidence on the outcome of the meeting scheduled for Monday, it was the turn of the Spokesman of the Greek government to report his optimism.
Pantelis Kapsis estimated that his country has "the green light of the Eurogroup on Monday to continue the proceedings". In fact, the latter confirmed that Athens would have found a way to fill the gap of 325 million euros in the 2012 budget, the last condition set by the Troika (the IMF, the ECB and the European Union) to unlock loan of EUR 130 billion and run the erase operation 100 billion of securities held by private creditors. According to Greek media, these savings would come from additional cuts in special pay schemes public service, drop some special pensions and declining defense budget and pharmaceutical expenditure.
Moreover, the European Central Bank and central banks of euro area countries have initiated the exchange of Greek bonds in their possession against others, to generate capital gains that should ultimately benefit in Athens, according information reported by the German daily Die Welt guaranteed payday loans.
The markets also seem to believe that an agreement will be reached Monday. This morning, the stock markets in Asia are well oriented, driven by good statistics in the United States but also by the hope that agreement will soon be born. U.S. markets ended Thursday's session at their highest level since May 2008.
But Greece could agree to pay this price. The release of the necessary loan of 130 billion euros would indeed be conditioned to a wider public audit of the country. The agreement would include the creation of an escrow account which would contain sufficient funds to repay the debts of the country over the next twelve months. Moreover, Athens would complete a list of "24 priority actions" before the end of the month and before the release of the famous loan of the Troika, says the Financial Times.
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