Mon, May 28, 2012, 12:39 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Greek deal to cut spending does not end debt drama

Greece agrees to slash spending to put bailout within reach, yet economic pain is not over

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) -- More than two years after it came clean about its addiction to debt, Greece may finally have begun its long and painful road to recovery.

Greece's fractious political leaders struck a deal Thursday to make deep cuts in government jobs and spending to help save the country from a default that could shock the world financial system.

The deal, under negotiation since July, is one of two critical steps Greece must take to receive a €130 billion ($170 billion) bailout from other countries in Europe and around the globe. It was announced by Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos' office and will be scrutinized during talks in Brussels between finance ministers from the 17 countries that use the euro.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said no final agreement unleashing the bailout money would be reached Thursday. He said more work had to be done to fulfill the conditions for a bailout.

In addition to the fiscal austerity mandated by the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, Greece is close to an agreement with private investors who hold nearly two-thirds of its debt to sharply reduce the country's borrowing costs.

Greece needs the bailout by March 20 so it will have enough money to redeem €14.5 billion worth of bonds coming due. If it doesn't make that payment, it will be in default. Financial analysts fear that could set off a chain reaction similar to the financial meltdown triggered by the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers in the fall of 2008.

The bailout will ease some of the uncertainty that has unsettled Europe and the world financial system for more than two years, but it will not bring down the curtain on Greece's debt drama.

Greece remains in a deep recession. Unemployment is 20.9 percent after the economy's fifth straight year of decline. Its government finances and its economy are being dragged down by costly political patronage, tax evasion and special protections for some favored trades.

Greece will be struggling to pay its debts for years, says Domenico Lombardi, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. "The scope of the problems that have to be tackled in Greece are so huge and so entrenched," he says.

Efforts to fix those fundamental problems, at the behest of Greece's increasingly exasperated creditors — including prosperous Germany — are moving slowly, if at all. If they are not solved, Greece may find itself back at the edge of default.

The deal Greek political leaders struck Thursday includes a 22 percent cut in the monthly minimum wage to €586 ($780), layoffs for 15,000 civil servants and an end to dozens of job guarantee provisions.

Greece is also close to a vital debt-relief deal with banks, hedge funds, pension funds and other private investors. Under the tentative deal, the private investors would exchange €206 billion in Greek government bonds for €30 billion in cash, plus €70 billion in new bonds. The cash would come from the €130 billion package from Europe and the IMF. The new bonds also would have a lower average interest rate and a longer term of maturity.

The combination of less principal to repay when the bonds mature and less interest to pay every year until then means Greece would spend about 70 percent less than it would have without a deal.

The debt held by the European Central Bank and other public institutions accounts for one-third of Greece's national debt and is not part of this tentative deal. However, ECB President Mario Draghi said Thursday that the bank could distribute to member countries the profits it stands to make on Greek bonds, leaving open the possibility of additional debt relief for Greece.

If Greece were to default, investors would become reluctant to lend to other heavily indebted European countries for fear they would not get their money back, pushing their borrowing costs even higher than they are now.

Those other countries include Italy, which has an economy six times the size of Greece's. Most analysts say Italy is too big to bail out.

The specter of default has hung over world financial markets for more than two years. Whenever there has been progress — and, indeed, U.S. stock indexes have doubled from the lows they reached in March 2009 — Greece has always stood in the way of more.

And while the immediate danger appears to have passed, it is far from clear whether Greece has won enough debt relief to fix its finances for good.

Its economy — ultimately the key to handling debt — remains in a deep recession. It shrank at an annual rate of 5 percent in the third quarter of 2011. Earlier in the year, it was shrinking at an 8.3 percent rate, about as fast as the United States economy was shrinking during the worst of the Great Recession. Thousands of shops and small businesses, vital to the Greek economy, have gone bankrupt. And protesters have taken to the streets of Athens regularly to denounce the government and its austerity measures.

Greece's troubles with debt go back to the 1980s, when successive governments began increasing the size of government and the number of public employees. By 2010, the total had reached 750,000 full-time employees — including 10,000 Greek Orthodox priests and 81,000 military officers — and 150,000 on part-time contracts. That was almost one in five people in the Greek labor force.

Government jobs became a way of rewarding supporters of Greece's two main political parties. The parties made matters worse by raising the wages of government employees to unsustainable levels. At the same time, the government was lax about collecting taxes. It had to issue ever more debt to cover its spiraling wage bills.

At first, bond investors lent freely, at interest rates slightly higher than for economic powerhouse Germany. After all, Greece was one of the 17 countries that use the euro. All had promised to observe strict budget and deficit limits. And while on paper the treaty that created the 27-country European Union forbade bailouts, there was a vague sense that Europe could not let a country go bust.

Then came Oct. 21, 2009. A newly elected government in Athens told its European partners that its finances were far worse than the previous government had disclosed.

The national deficit, the difference between what a government takes in and what it spends, was not 3.7 percent of annual economic output, as had been believed. It was 12.5 percent, and that was later revised higher to 15.4 percent. One condition of being in the eurozone was that countries were required to keep deficits to a manageable level of no more than 3 percent of economic output.

Investors around the world, still reeling from the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the worldwide financial crisis just a year earlier, began looking hard at risk. They demanded higher interest rates to loan Greece money by buying its bonds, and Greece's borrowing costs soared.

On April 27, 2010, ratings agency Standard & Poor's downgraded Greek bonds to junk status — the first time a eurozone country was given a non-investment grade rating.

The next month, other euro countries and the IMF intervened. They promised €110 billion in loans — to be paid out in stages — so that Greece could pay its debts as they came due.

The terms of the bailout were harsh: higher taxes and deep cuts in public spending and wages at least through 2020, a package of fiscal belt-tightening known as austerity. As it took hold, the Greek economy sagged further, and it's expected to remain weak for years.

The second €130 billion bailout package would come as loans plus €30 billion in cash that would go to the private creditors who agree to swap their bonds. Greece would use an additional €40 billion of the bailout money to invest in the country's banks, which stand to take massive losses as part of the debt-relief deal.

Even with the debt relief and the bailout money, it will be difficult for Greece to ensure that its new, lower level of debt is manageable, or that it will be able to sell bonds at favorable interest rates over the next decade. Greece will have to continue borrowing money to repay holders of bonds that mature, as well as to finance budget deficits that will continue, even though they'll be smaller.

"I do not think the plan will work," says Uri Dadush, director of the international economics program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Dadush says Greece needs even more debt relief.

But a responsible budget and sound economic policies are supposed to convince investors that the country will be able to pay its debts, and thus should be able to borrow at affordable rates.

In recent weeks, other countries in the European Union have made progress doing just that. In the final months of last year, countries such as Italy and Spain watched helplessly as yields on their debt spiraled ever higher. Governments fell in Rome and Madrid.

The new governments moved swiftly to cut spending. The result has been an easier time raising money in the bond markets and much lower rates. On Nov. 25, the interest rate on Italy's two-year bonds was 7.40 percent. On Friday, it was 2.96 percent, the lowest since June 2010.

Much of the improvement, though, is credited to the European Central Bank, which announced a program in December designed to help stabilize shaky banks in the eurozone. The ECB said it would loan the banks unlimited amounts of money at 1 percent interest and for three years instead of the normal one. The banks responded by borrowing €489 billion ($632.6 billion). They've used at least some of that money to buy government bonds — extra demand that has helped bring down governments' borrowing costs.

But Greece's problems are so severe it has remained locked out of the bond market.

Greece's outstanding government debt is about €350 billion, an amount equal to more than 160 percent of its annual economic output. The budget reforms and debt-relief deals aim to get that figure down to 120 percent by 2020. The United States has a debt-to-gross domestic product ratio of 100 percent. But because it is seen by investors as one of the safest countries to lend to, its borrowing costs have stayed low.

For Greece, the target of 120 percent is still a relatively high figure. According to the IMF, it is at the limit of what is manageable. And the figure assumes that Greece's economy will meet expectations for economic growth — no sure thing after years of ever deeper recession.

Also in question is whether Greek voters, who will choose a new government in an election tentatively set for April, will put up with eight more years of austerity.

___

AP Economics Writer Paul Wiseman in Washington contributed to this report.

 
  • Tim  •  Escondido, California  •  3 months ago
    21% unemployement and 50% of the adult population is retired. This is not a good situation.
    • arnaldor 3 months ago
      Let's keep staying home instead of voting, or when you do vote for more Republicans in the House. You'll then see these % of the unemployed going higher. Social Security and Medicare gone! Then, you'll see the % of homeless elders going higher. More wars in strange lands. Then, you'll see the % of body bags with our love ones inside going higher. The medical providers charging and arm a leg, since there is no government agency that controls them. "The market will take care of itself" Yeah, a "free" market. Then, you'll see more people in the emergency rooms looking for medical help. Our taxes paying for all this. That is those who can afford to pay taxes since most people will unemployed. "Yeah, lets vote Republican!"
    • YYY 3 months ago
      OMG..... 50% retirees.....
    • Me 3 months ago
      arnador, the president of greece was the leader of the socialist party. look it up. socialism fails, you #$%$
  • LAWRENCE  •  Wallingford, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
    I have to laugh when they say Greece has averted a default. They are defaulting. Talk to the investors taking a 70% hit. Maybe it is an orderly default, but it is definitely a default. Italy will be in this same situation soon. They will be talking trillions to bail them out, not billions. If the US doesn't take it's debt seriously soon we may find ourselves in a very bad situation.
    • Dan L 3 months ago
      You are absolutely correct. But the "journalists" can't think beyond what they are told by the state...
    • watchman 3 months ago
      Lawrence, the mechanism is essentially the same for all industrialized countries. It has all been PLANNED, and the perverse plan is working perfectly. Give the masses what they crave, and a little bit more, while building up insurrmountable debt that cannot realistically be repaid. Then pull the rug out from the masses in the name of saving countries/austerity. Make the middle classes disappear, so that the impoverished masses can be more easily controlled by the coming one world government. Also, mass population reduction will be orchestrated by the elites through a short but deadly version of WW3, probably involving nukes. Hundreds of millions will die in that nuclear exchange, followed by the ushering in of that one world government, led by the beast.
    • Statement 3 months ago
      ahhh Goldman Sachs the great puppet master, cons these stupid 14 hr/week working gypsies into hiding their debt in a swap so they can apply to the EU who falls for it, while Goldman now gets a cut of greek social security, its healthcare and other social programs systems while the rest of greecs is sold to the Chinese and whatever is left is written in a petty drachma of payback for the Germans who will have to eat it hahaha...they all deserve each other!
  • JillH  •  Roslyn, New York  •  3 months ago
    A Greek, an Italian and a Spaniard walk into a bar. Who pays the tab at the end of the night?

    Germany!
    • P 3 months ago
      Sooner or later those dumb germans will get a clue. Just don't let them have any guns, they are some mean SOBs when they get mad.
    • Zoey 3 months ago
      Though, the Germans, are ALSO in debt. x] So, no one, can fit anyone's bill, this time!
    • PurgeDC 3 months ago
      I thought it was Ricky Martin?
  • BOO  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    What about USA We are copying Greece . Are we STUPID or WHAT ?
    Who is going to bail us out CHINA ?
    • Ricky Ray R 3 months ago
      yes... Liberals are stupid
      no, China will not bail us out but will OWN US
    • watchman 3 months ago
      We and many others will follow Greece, because this is a similar mechanism in process that has been PLANNED for decades. The goal is NOT to fix things. Rather, it is to squeeze untold millions of middle class citizens around the world down into the poverty zone, so whole populations can be more easily controlled by the soon-to-come one world government, which will be oppressive and brutal in nature. Their perverse plan is working beautifully, and it paves the way for that coming government, which will be led by the beast. Things are suddenly coming to a head. Another goal for them is to reduce population, as they have been pulling the war strings for many countries. A version of WW3 is coming. Russia and Iran figure prominently in that war, as well as many other countries. Nukes will likely be involved, and untold millions will die and/or suffer in that relatively short war.

      Other than that, it's all sunshine, rainbows, and lollipops.
    • e.v 3 months ago
      very funny you to late for that round eye we already own you.......
  • Fast Eddie  •  3 months ago
    All it sounds to me is just kicking the can down the road
    • Casey 3 months ago
      I agree, it seems every couple of months we hear the same thing over.
  • Bada Bing  •  Kansas City, Kansas  •  3 months ago
    They will never pay their debt. I don't see how they get people to buy new debt they issue, either, after scalping prior bond holders 70%. This whole thing is a farce designed to kick the can further down the road so the current criminals involved can get out with minimal losses, with the taxpayers bearing the brunt.

    The political elite are cannibalizing the world to sustain themselves.
  • Deepsix  •  Norwalk, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
    When are the Europeans just going to let this spoiled country just go? Greeks need to return to the Drachma and have 80% of their wealth vanish. The Greeks have over valued themselves, they suckle off the Germans high productivity and efficiency. Chapter 9 will happen here tooin the US, Rhode Island, Harrisburg PA, Detroit, Illinois, California and more.
  • True  •  3 months ago
    California to follow.
  • AUForC  •  Perth, Australia  •  3 months ago
    Their just postponing the enevitable, lets stop all the Bullshyt suffer the recession and then get on with it and hopfully we learn from the screwups of the 2008 and 2012, the recession is not avoidable. In the words of KEATING "its the recession we had to have"
  • pikachuflatulates  •  3 months ago
    Cut gov't spending? What a novel idea. Why didn't we think of that. Wait, we did! In fact, Obama did too, but then he got excited being president and forgot all about it.
  • Frank  •  3 months ago
    The Euro was a mistake.
  • 77then11  •  Beaverton, Oregon  •  3 months ago
    Obama is bent on creating a society that is just like Greece -- totally dependent on government handouts and entitled to any and everything, except productive work. Those that are responsible and work hard are fools supporting those "wise" enough to be feasting on the government nanny. His latest -- $25 B for those that went in over their head and stopped paying their mortgages. Those that did all they could to stay afloat and pay off their debts -- absolutely nothing -- not even an attaboy. And the money comes from the banks that got the money from the US taxpayers. Sickening.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    Most of the world is in debt up to their eyeballs. There are only two ways to fix this mess: war or reset and default.
  • UNKNOWN  •  Ridgeland, Mississippi  •  3 months ago
    Obama's most famous words were "we can spend our way out of debt" Greece must have listened.
  • Joshua  •  3 months ago
    What is happening in Greece is just another of the many example illustrating one of the most significant flaws with human nature.

    Despite our "intellectual" knowledge that we are running up against a serious problem, we are loathe to correct our actions until the problem is already upon us, and thus, the solution has magnified in difficulty.

    I don't know that it's because we are perpetually hopeful that things will always work out alright, or whether we are content to let things go until the paths forward are narrowed down for us.
  • MW  •  Cape Girardeau, Missouri  •  3 months ago
    We are just one "Obama Spending Spree" away!
  • Bob  •  3 months ago
    Let the rioting begin!!!
  • ErnstG  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    It's ironic that birthplace of Democracy shall be its grave too. The natural lifecycle of a democracy ends once populus discovers that they can vote money for themselves, elected politicians being the tools.
  • T. Jefferson  •  Scranton, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    Prez. Obama sez, "More Government programs. More spending. Oh, and try to get more unions involved in Government matters, too. That should work."
  • Ricky Ray R  •  3 months ago
    lets see..... BAILED OUT TWICE ALREADY by other countries...and STILL kept spending....
    NOW....after the Greek Government made Pedophilia a "handicap" that gets government money, and constant spending on SOCIAL PROGRAMS.... they decide "hmmmm Maybe we should spend less???"

    hey LIBERALS.... LOOK CLOSELY....THIS IS WHAT YOUR SPENDING IS GOING TO DO TO AMERICA SOON!!!
    freaking LEMMINGS!!!
 
Recent Quotes
Symbol Price Change % Chg 
Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
 
Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.

Trading Center

Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

  YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER