Greece pledges to meet ‘all obligations’

Lagarde says IMF has received confirmation that €450m loan due this week will be repaid

Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis is surrounded by members of the media as he comments on  discussions he had just concluded with the International Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde in Washington. Photograph: Mike Theiler/Reuters
Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis is surrounded by members of the media as he comments on discussions he had just concluded with the International Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde in Washington. Photograph: Mike Theiler/Reuters

Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis has said that Greece "intends to meet all obligations to all its creditors, ad infinitum," seeking to quell default fears ahead of a loan payment Athens owes the IMF later this week.

Following a meeting with the head of the International Monetary Fund, Mr Varoufakis told reporters the government plans to "reform Greece deeply" and would seek to improve the "efficacy of negotiations" with its creditors.

Greece has not received bailout funds since August last year and has resorted to measures such as borrowing from state entities to tide it over. It offered a new package of reforms last week in the hope of unlocking funds, but has yet to win agreement on the proposals with its EU and IMF lenders.

Shop employees hold banners reading ‘Never work on Sunday’ in Athens’ Ermou main shopping district, during a protest in opposition to Sunday shop opening. Many consumers took to the streets in the Athens shopping districts as department stores stayed open on Sunday due to the extra Easter shopping. Photograph: Simela Pantzartzi/EPA
Shop employees hold banners reading ‘Never work on Sunday’ in Athens’ Ermou main shopping district, during a protest in opposition to Sunday shop opening. Many consumers took to the streets in the Athens shopping districts as department stores stayed open on Sunday due to the extra Easter shopping. Photograph: Simela Pantzartzi/EPA
Greek national flags are displayed for sale at a one-Euro shop in Athens. Greece has said it will pay a €450 million loan installment to the International Monetary Fund due on April 9 on time. Photograph: Kostas Tsironis/Files
Greek national flags are displayed for sale at a one-Euro shop in Athens. Greece has said it will pay a €450 million loan installment to the International Monetary Fund due on April 9 on time. Photograph: Kostas Tsironis/Files

Most urgently, Athens is on the hook for a roughly €450 million loan repayment to the IMF due this Thursday.

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The interior minister suggested last week the government would prioritise wages and pensions over the IMF payment, although the government later denied that was its stance.

IMF managing director Christine Lagarde said in a statement after meeting with Mr Varoufakis that she welcomed his confirmation that the loan payment due would be made on schedule.

“I welcomed confirmation by the minister that payment owing to the Fund would be forthcoming on April 9th,” Ms Lagarde said.

She said due diligence efforts in Athens and talks with teams in Brussels over the terms of Greece’s bailout would “resume promptly on Monday.”

The eurozone country is fast running out of cash, but the bailout extended by the IMF, European Commission and European Central Bank has been frozen until the leftist-led government reaches agreement on a package of reforms.

After a first set of planned measures failed to impress lenders, Athens offered a more detailed package on Wednesday.

But it arrived too late to be discussed at a teleconference with euro zone deputy finance ministers.

The government is hoping approval of its reform proposals will free up the remaining aid of €7.2 billion under its bailout and lead to the return of about €1.9 billion in profits made by the European Central Bank on Greek bonds.

Greece now has its hopes set on another meeting of eurozone deputy finance ministers on April 8-9th, although it is unlikely that a deal could be reached by then. The next meeting of euro zone finance ministers will take place on April 24th.

"It is necessary to restore the Greek economy's funding flow," labour minister Panos Skourletis told the Greek Ependysi newspaper on Saturday, accusing the country's lenders of taking advantage of Greece's funding limits to add pressure on Athens.

“Whether the country will meet its external obligations depends on our lenders’ final political choices and stance,” he said, adding that pensions and wages were not at risk.

Reuters