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Politics

Athens, Berlin laud latest Greek austerity deal

June 16, 2017

Greek officials have praised their latest deal with international creditors. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble, a frequent antagonist in anti-austerity Athens, has, too, praised Greece's latest cuts.

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Flaggen Griechenland EU Währungsunion
Image: Getty Images/C. Furlong

On Friday, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said the latest austerity deal negotiated by his government would allow Greece to stand on its own feet financially soon. Creditors lent the country 8.5 billion euros ($9.5 billion) on Thursday. The new loan will help Greece pay back $7 billion owed to creditors by July.

"We took a decisive step leading our country out of the economic crisis," Tsipras said on Friday.

Late Thursday, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble expressed tepid satisfaction with Greek officials' acceptance of the creditors' requirements in an interview with DW.

"We always knew that Greece had a very difficult path ahead, and it will remain a long, arduous journey," Schäuble told Deutsche Welle. "Therefore, one must not create the illusion for the Greek public that everything has already been achieved. But they are now making good progress, and we're helping Greece."

He added that the goal was for Greece to "stand on its own feet" by the middle of next year.

Wide-ranging deal

Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the chairman of the Eurogroup, said the deal covered "all elements," including pension cuts and a further opening of Greece to foreign investors. Labor advocates were especially stunned by the creditors' enshrining of an anti-union measure into the requirements.

German officials expressed willingness to consider easing Greece's debt burden through reprogramming the repayment after the present agreement expires next year. Officials in Berlin want to retain leverage over Greece to make sure that the country implements cuts dictated by previous packages.The Bundestag must review whether the deal deviates from a 2015 credit package enough to need new German parliamentary approval.

Prolonged austerity

Those familiar with conditions in Greece over seven years of austerity were more critical. The economist Yanis VaroufakisSchäuble's erstwhile counterpart and frequent opponent, called the requirement of a budget surplus of 3.5 percent of GDP through 2022 and 2 percent through 2060 unrealistic - even cruel.

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"The Eurogroup remains committed to an insane level of austerity," Varoufakis wrote on his blog on Friday, picking apart the creditors' statement line by line. "After those further four years of mind- and soul-numbing recession, for those Greeks that remain in the country (and who have not migrated as a result of the utter misery the Eurogroup has spread all over the land), the austerity will be a little lessened until ... 2060."

mkg/se (Reuters, AFP, dpa, AP)