ATHENS: Greece needs 50 billion more euros ($55 billion) over the next three years, including 36 billion euros from European Union (EU) lenders, to stabilise its finances even under existing creditor plans, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said Thursday.
In a new report on Greece’s financing needs, the IMF also cut the country’s economic growth prospects for this year to 0 per cent from 2.5 per cent forecast in April. That growth estimate was made before Greece broke off talks with official creditors last weekend and ordered capital controls and its banks shut for a week.
The IMF’s new “preliminary draft” debt sustainability analysis for the country said the changes in Greek policies and its financial outlook since early 2015, roughly covering the period that the anti-austerity Syriza Party and Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras have led the country, “have resulted in a substantial increase in financing needs”. Existing proposals by the Greek side and EU creditors do not address those needs.
“Greece faces a significantly larger financing need going forward than we thought last year,” a senior IMF official told journalists.