Greek cabinet approves austerity budget
The Greek cabinet has approved a 2012-2015 austerity budget plan as well as laws for its application, a key condition for further EU-IMF help to tame its massive public debt, government sources said.
The move came after the world's largest bond fund said it expected the country to default on its debts
The government, which only hours earlier survived a confidence vote, had committed to another round of stiff budget cuts in return for fresh EU-IMF cash and a new debt rescue deal.
The government won the confidence motion by 155 votes to 143, but Prime Minister George Papandreou now faces a fraught challenge to overcome dissent within the ranks of his Socialist party over the debt-cutting onslaught.
Eurozone ministers are insisting on crash action before they will release the next slice of debt funding and move ahead on a new bailout.
The latest tranche worth 12bn (£10.7bn) is due under a 110bn debt rescue package agreed with the European Union and International Monetary Fund in May last year.
Pimco, the world's biggest bond fund, shrugged off last night's vote of confidence in the Greek government warning that it expects Greece and other European economies to default on their debts to resolve their problems.
"For the next three years, we're going to see different economies work out different problems. For European economies, especially Greece, it would be through default," Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive of Pimco, said in Taipei on Wednesday in a video conference.
His comments came as the Greek government won a crucial vote of confidence late on Tuesday as it seeks further financial aid from the European Union and the IMF to avoid the eurozone's first sovereign debt default.
Mr El-Erian did not identify the other economies he referred to (we know which ones they are, thank you very much). He has said Europe risks wasting money for nothing by pumping billions of dollars into the ailing economy.
"Nothing has been done to enhance growth," he said. "No single (Greek) indicator has shown strength. They are afraid a restructuring would hurt European banks."
However, he doubted a Greek default could trigger another global financial crisis: "Ireland, Portugal, Italy and Spain would have to be involved. But Greece is too small in terms of economic impact."
Horacio Valeiras, chief investment officer of fund firm Allianz Global Investors Capital (AGIC), predicted that Ireland and Portugal, countries that also received financial bailouts in the wake of the global credit crisis, will have to restructure their debts.
"We are not investing in Greece, Ireland, Spain and Portugal," he said at the press briefing. He sees default in Greece as "inevitable".
The real fight in Greece will come when the austerity measures face a vote by lawmakers by the end of the month.
The confidence vote in Athens came after a European ultimatum requiring the state to agree to a five-year austerity package of measures within the next two weeks or miss out on a 12bn tranche of aid money. Without the loan, Athens will run out of cash next month.
European officials are also considering a second bailout package worth an estimated 120bn that is meant to extend Greece's year-old 110bn deal and fund it into 2014.
"These next ten days are the most crucial in the last 30 years," Deputy Finance Minister Pantelis Ekonomou said in a radio interview.
The euro slipped against the dollar on Wednesday as investors who bought the single currency following the vote of confidence took profits, signalling market concerns that the eurozone debt crisis is far from over.
George Papandreou, the prime minister, made a dramatic plea to parliament on Wednesday: "We have a unique opportunity (to change the country)," he said. "If we falter, if we lose heart and squander it... history will judge us very harshly."
Greece's main unions plan to hold a 48-hour general strike when the new measures go to parliament.
Francois Baroin , a French government spokesman, welcomed the vote of confidence on Wednesday, adding: "We will not accept any payment incident, or default."
California-based Pimco (Pacific Investment Management Company), is based in California and is the world's biggest bond fund manager with nearly $1.3 trillion in assets under management.
Greek cabinet approves austerity budget - Telegraph
Fitch warns any Greek debt rollover would be treated as a default
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