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Merkel sees IMF taking part in Greek bailout
Merkel sees IMF taking part in Greek bailout
German Chancellor Angela Merkel (left) posing for a photo before the recording of an interview with ZDF television yesterday. Merkel said IMF managing director Christine Lagarde has made it clear she will back the fund’s participation starting in October if conditions including eased terms on previous aid loans to Greece are met.Bloomberg/BerlinGerman Chancellor Angela Merkel said she’s confident the International Monetary Fund will join Greece’s third bailout and signalled willingness to consider debt relief to help make it happen.Merkel’s first public comments since euro-area finance ministers backed the €86bn ($96bn) aid package were partly aimed at her party’s lawmakers, who want the chancellor to ensure that the IMF contributes to the latest Greek rescue. Germany’s lower house will vote on the bailout on Wednesday.IMF managing director Christine Lagarde has made it clear she will back the fund’s participation starting in October if conditions including eased terms on previous aid loans to Greece are met, Merkel said in an interview on ZDF television yesterday.“And I have no doubt that what Mrs Lagarde said will then become reality,” she said. “We said in July that maybe — no, not maybe — there is still leeway on the extension of maturities, on interest rates.”Merkel’s allies are already selling the Greek bailout to German lawmakers, who set their approval vote for the day before an August 20 deadline for Greece to pay €3.2bn to the European Central Bank.The chancellor rearranged her schedule to try to limit the party revolt against aiding Greece, moving up a trip to the Expo 2015 fair in Milan by 24 hours to today so she can address her caucus Tuesday on the night before the vote.Two senior lawmakers in Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union endorsed the deal Saturday, saying it reflects Germany’s need to reach a compromise with its 18 euro-area partners.“This is what’s currently achievable in Europe,” lawmakers Ralph Brinkhaus and Eckhardt Rehberg said in a joint statement. Greece “has cooperated” and accepted conditions important to Germany, making the aid accord “justifiable,” they said.A resolution to the standoff with Greece may help spur Europe’s stuttering recovery. Euro-area economic growth unexpectedly slowed last quarter as the region’s three largest economies fell short of estimates. Even so, the euro’s weakness is bolstering German growth, and Greek bond yields dropped below 10% last week after climbing to 19.58% in July, the highest since October 2012.Approval by Germany’s parliament is needed to unlock Greece’s three-year bailout, which includes immediate funds to cover looming bills such as the ECB payment. While Merkel’s coalition has consistently backed bailouts during Europe’s debt crisis, dissent has grown with each vote and 60 lawmakers in her 311-member caucus voted against even holding talks on further aid to Greece last month. Under the deal by euro-area finance ministers, €26bn will be available in the first disbursement for Greece, including €10bn for a fund to recapitalise banks. Extending the repayment periods of Greek aid loans will be conditional on Greece’s government meeting the conditions of the bailout.Merkel praised Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s government for changing tack after a “real confrontation” with Greece’s creditors in a bid to escape austerity measures tied to bailouts. Yet there’s no guarantee that Greece’s government will keep up its recent “intensity of work,” she told ZDF.One reason to move forward on the bailout is Europe’s “extreme” refugee crisis, which is turning into a bigger challenge “than Greece or the euro crisis,” Merkel said.