Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble insisted on Tuesday that the new deal aimed at slashing Greece's debt load won't cost German taxpayers. It will, however, deny Germany billions in expected revenues. And the feared debt cut may be just around a not-too-distant corner.
By Spiegel
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble is a clever
orator. In comments to the press on Tuesday, he first made sure to praise Greek
reform efforts before turning to the most recent measures passed to prop up the
heavily indebted country. Then he said that the new aid package, aimed at reducing Greece's overall debt load and
giving the country two extra years to meet its budget deficit reduction
targets, won't cost German taxpayers a penny.
It is a bold statement. And one that leaves plenty of
room for interpretation. Particularly given Schäuble's follow up. Berlin, he
said, will suffer a "reduction of revenues."
It is a typical Schäuble formulation: a bit ambiguous
and slightly misleading. But the numbers are clear enough. Germany will forego
some €730 million ($944 million) in revenues in 2013 as part of the deal hashed
out on Monday night in Brussels between euro-zone finance ministers and the
International Monetary Fund. It is a compromise that avoids, for now, the kind of debt
haircut that Berlin had been so opposed to. But it marks the first time that the crisis in
Greece will have a direct effect on the German budget.











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