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2016-12-13 — telegraph.co.uk
The International Monetary Fund has hit back at claims that it is demanding more austerity in Greece, as the Fund warned that the country's ambitious budget targets were "simply not credible".
Firing a broadside at Brussels and Athens, Maurice Obstfeld, the IMF's chief economist, and Poul Thomsen, director of the IMF's European department, said cuts to investment and discretionary spending had "gone too far" and would prevent the Greek economy from recovering. ... They warned that demands by Greece's creditors for a sustained 3.5pc primary surplus - which excludes debt servicing costs - were unrealistic and unnecessary. The IMF has previously insisted that a primary surplus target of 1.5pc of GDP is more realistic. It has also called for significant debt relief that goes beyond the action taken this month to reduce Greece's debt share by 20 percentage points. ... The IMF's frustration casts further doubt on its participation in the country's third rescue programme, which is a key objective for eurozone governments in Germany, the Netherlands, and Finland. See also this WSJ article:
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