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Home International Customs Greece

Greece ready to compromise on Bailout Deal: Greece Officials

byCustoms Today Report
12/06/2015
in Greece, International Customs
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ATHENS: The Greece government is willing to accept a higher primary surplus target for this year to meet one of its creditors’ demands, a senior government official said ahead of a crucial meeting Wednesday among the leaders of Greece, Germany and France.

“The Greek government is willing to accept a target for primary surplus of 1% for gross domestic product under conditions,” the Greek official said.

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Earlier this week, the government in Athens sent an updated draft with economic overhauls that the government was willing to accept to unlock much-needed aid. That draft called for primary surpluses–the excess of revenues over expenditures before interest payments are made–of 0.75% of gross domestic product in 2015, 1.75% in 2016, and 2.5% in 2017.

But those targets were lower than the targets presented to Greece last week in a new proposal from the commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF, the three institutions representing Greece’s creditors. The creditors’ proposal called for primary surpluses of 1% in 2015, 2% in 2016 and 3% in 2017.

Weeks of negotiations and several high-level political meetings have brought the two sides closer together on some of the terms for unlocking urgently needed aid for Athens. But the back-and-forth makes clear that fundamental differences remain over how to prevent Greece from defaulting on its debt and possibly leaving the eurozone.

Tags: compromiseGreece ready

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