European finance
ministers eased the terms on emergency aid for Greece, declaring after
three years of false starts that Europe has found
the formula for nursing the debt-stricken country back to health.
In the latest bid
to keep the 17-nation euro intact, the ministers cut the rates on bailout
loans, suspended interest payments for a decade, gave Greece more time to repay
and engineered a Greek bond buyback. The country was also cleared to receive a
34.4 billion-euro ($44.7 billion) loan installment in December. Greek bonds
rose.
“This has been a
very difficult deal,” Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told
reporters in Brussels after chairing a 13-hour meeting that ended early today.
“All initiatives decided upon today will bring Greece’s public debt clearly
back on a sustainable path.”
After 240 billion
euros in loan pledges and the biggest write down of privately held debt failed
to turn Greece around, the creditor governments led by Germany proclaimed
the latest fix just as they grappled with swelling financing needs in Cyprus
and a potential aid request by Spain, the fourth-largest euro economy.
‘New Day’
In Athens, Prime Minister
Antonis Samaras went on national television after midnight to celebrate a “new
day” for Europe’s most debt-ridden country. While the financing pact rewarded
the government’s budget cuts and steps to overhaul the economy, Greece will
have to deliver on its commitments to earn each payout.







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