BY MATT
PICHT
Greece's new leftist government has doubled down on their promise
to radically restructure their debt burden.
Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis told reporters, "But with the troika, which aims at implementing a program
which we consider anti-European, with this committee, which according to the
European Parliament is poorly structured, we do not aim to work with."
The country's new finance
minister vowed Friday the government
would not negotiate with the coalition of lenders, known as the troika,
which currently manages Greece's debt. He also said Greece would not seek an
extension of their current bailout plan.
This is a pretty bold move, considering Greece is running up
against a troika deadline. The lenders were supposed to review Greece's
finances by the end of February, which would unlock €7 billion of bailout
money.
Greece desperately needs
that money to meet its previous debt commitments; however, that pile of
cash is locked behind the strict austerity measures which have
crippled Greece's economy for years. (Video via CBS)
Instead of accepting more austerity,
Greece wants to negotiate directly with each of Greece's lenders for a new deal on its loans —
preferably one that includes a massive debt write-off and greater risk-sharing
provisions.
The country's new prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, and his party Syriza
were elected last week on their pledge to roll back
austerity and restructure Greece's debt. Tsipras has already started
reversing some of the country's austerity policies.
But Tsipras can't push against the debtors too far. Without their
bailout money, Greece risks a massive default and a possible exit
from the Euro — something neither side wants to see happen.
From: NEWSY.com
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