Greek government defends bailout deal ahead of vote

1Thursday, Aug. 13, 2015 | 12:48 p.m.
2Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras listens during his visit at the transport ministry in Athens, Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015.
3Details of Greece's latest bailout package were being pored over across Europe on Wednesday as Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras insisted the agreement with creditors would put "a definitive end to economic uncertainty."
4Greek Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos gives a speech at committee level in the Parliament ahead of a full assembly debate and vote, expected around midnight , in Athens, Thursday, Aug. 13, 2015.
5The Greek government defended its new bailout program as tough but essential to avoid the nation's financial collapse, as it faced a rebellion in parliament ahead of a vote on the deal later in the day.
6Greek Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos attends a committee meeting in the Parliament ahead of a full assembly debate and vote, expected around midnight, in Athens, Thursday, Aug. 13, 2015.
7Greece's Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos, right, and Greek Economy Minister Giorgos Stathakis attend a committee meeting in the Parliament ahead of a full assembly debate and vote, expected around midnight , in Athens, Thursday, Aug. 13, 2015.
8Young women take a "selfie" under two Greek flags at Monastiraki square in Athens, Thursday, Aug. 13, 2015.
9People sit outside an orthodox church with Greek flags at Monastiraki square in Athens, Thursday, Aug. 13, 2015.
10Elderly women wait at a bus stop in central Athens, Thursday, Aug. 13, 2015.The Greek government defended its new bailout program as tough but essential to avoid the nation's financial collapse, as it faced a rebellion in parliament ahead of a vote on the deal later in the day.
11The Greek government defended its new bailout program in tumultuous parliamentary sessions Thursday, as it faced a rebellion in the governing Syriza party ahead of a vote on the deal.
12The draft bill for the three-year rescue package worth about 85 billion euros ($93 billion) in loans includes harsh spending cuts and tax hikes that Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has said he has no option but to implement.
13His radical left Syriza party won elections in January on the promise to repeal similar budget austerity imposed in return for Greece's two previous bailouts.
14The tough terms of the new deal - agreed on this week with creditor negotiators from the European Central Bank, European Commission and International Monetary Fund - have left Tsipras battling severe dissent from within his party.
15Former energy minister Panagiotis Lafazanis, a Syriza hardliner who lost his cabinet position last month after voting against another bailout-related bill, joined a group of another 12 left-wing politicians announcing Thursday they will create a new anti-bailout movement.
16His move "finalizes his decision, taken a while ago, to choose a different path than the government and Syriza," the government said in an emailed note.
17The draft bill was being debated for several hours at committee level ahead of a full assembly debate Thursday night, with a vote expected after midnight.
18It is expected to pass thanks to votes from opposition parties.
19Anti-austerity demonstrations were planned outside parliament Thursday evening.
20The deal then needs the approval of eurozone finance ministers, who are due to meet Friday afteroon, as well as approval from several other countries' parliaments, including Germany's.
21Germany, who was the largest single contributor to Greece's two previous bailouts, has been the country's harshest critic and has maintained a cautious stance.
22German deputy finance minister Jens Spahn said that "Germany isn't the only country that is still asking questions at the moment."
23Spahn told Deutschlandfunk radio that the Greek government clearly recognizes its country must change if it wants to remain in the eurozone - "a lot has been achieved."
24But he said it was normal "that questions are asked."
25Spahn stressed the importance to Germany of getting a clear signal from the IMF that it will remain a part of the bailout program and said there still needs to be discussion about details of a planned privatization fund that will sell off Greek state-owned property.
26Greece is anxious for the deal to be completed in time for it to receive funds ahead of a big debt repayment to the ECB due on Aug. 20.
27Without the money, it would default - reviving concerns that it might drop out of the euro, with disastrous economic consequences.
28Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos insisted Greece does not want an interim loan, which some creditors have proposed as a solution if the main bailout deal cannot be finalized with all creditors in time.
29However, senior EU finance officials overnight tasked the European Commission with drawing up a "contingency plan" for a new interim loan as a safety net, said an EU official who was not permitted to speak on the record due to departmental rules.
30If needed, the loan would take care of Greece's Aug. 20 debt payment and buy more time for eurozone members to tweak the plan.
31Speaking in parliament, Tsakalotos said the government has pledged to stick to the creditors' demand of achieving a budget surplus, when not counting debt servicing, of 3.5 percent of GDP by 2018, but that the country will have a more gradual path to achieve the target than originally foreseen.
32Greece will implement most of the savings in 2017 instead of this year and next year.
33Tsakalotos said there would be a package of measures in October that will be implemented in 2017.
34Greece's progress on reforms will be reviewed every three months.
35"I think there are very difficult measures in this package. In some of these we have tried to play with time" and stagger their implementation, such as gradual increases on diesel fuel taxes for farmers, to soften the blow, Tsakalotos said.
36The broad terms of the bailout were agreed on after months of acrimonious wrangling and failed negotiations that have cost the Greek economy dearly.
37The economy is expected to have taken a severe hit in July, when talks on the bailout collapsed, leading the government to close the banks and stock market for about a month.
38In the three months before that, however, the economy grew by an unexpected 0.8 percent compared with the previous quarter, the national statistics agency estimated Thursday.
39Analysts said the jump could have been due to a strong start to the tourism season and the government's suspension of some budget cuts.
40They note, however, that the economy likely took a big hit after the second quarter due to the capital controls.