Friday, June 5, 2015

Greece Misses Its First IMF Debt Payement



CNN: Greece delays IMF payment as cash runs short

The heavily indebted country has postponed a payment to the International Monetary Fund, underlining how urgently it needs its creditors to release more bailout funds to avoid default and possible exit from the eurozone.

Athens was supposed to pay the IMF about 300 million euros on Friday, but said Thursday it would bundle all the payments due this month into one. That means Greece now owes the fund 1.54 billion euros ($1.7 billion) by June 30.

IMF rules allow borrowers to combine payments of principal due in a calendar month, but the provision has been used only once before -- by Zambia in the mid-1980s.

WNU Editor: Greece .... for all intents and purposes .... is now technically in default. An indication to me on their desperation is that they are apparently looking at Russia for help (again) .... Greece crisis live: borrowing costs soar as Athens looks to Moscow (The Telegraph) .... but the problem is that Greece owes hundreds of billions of dollars, and they need/want billions and billions more .... Russia is not going to support such a situation unless their loans are fully backed and guaranteed .... but the problem is that Greece is completely tapped out.

More News On Greece Missing Its First IMF Debt Payement

Greece vows not to leave the euro after IMF payment defiance - live updates -- The Guardian
Greece's Gamble Delaying IMF Payment Roils Markets -- AP
IMF allows Greece to bundle June debt payments -- Deutsche Welle
Greece delays 5 June IMF debt payment -- BBC
Greece's Delay Hurts Markets -- US News and World Report
Tsipras and Greece Buy Time From I.M.F. -- NYT
Greece Raises Stakes in Showdown as Payment to IMF Deferred -- Bloomberg
Greece Postpones Payment to IMF -- Reuters
Greece's bailout talks are getting even more sour — and snap elections could be round the corner -- Business Insider
Greece PM Tsipras to face MPs' anger over debt talks -- BBC

1 comment:

B.Poster said...

In this situation, at least in the US, an individual does what is known as "chapter 7 bankruptcy." This way the debts get written off, the debtor gets a fresh start and, in theory, the debtor the debtor can't borrow anymore money. The debtor also may be subject to financial management courses where they learn how to manage their funds so that they understand that what goes in is only what can come out for expenditures. In other words, live within one's means.

It sounds like this is what Greece needs to do. Only whatever is collected in revenue is available for expenditures. In other words, no more borrowing. Essentially the United States needs to study this situation and try and learn because if the US continues with its current spending and borrowing policies it will find itself in the same situation Greece is in now. In fact, it may already be to late for the US to avoid this situation. The best that may be able to be done is to mitigate the pain.

You've posted on how the default affected Russia in the 1990s. I'd expect the US to be in a similar situation as Russia was then with perhaps an even bigger problem than Russia had. Where are the US ex-patriots or former US citizens who have emigrated to other countries who will or are able to send money back to America to "keep everything afloat" as I think you put it.