HomeNewsWorldWhy the IMF is wrong on a Greek debt haircut

Why the IMF is wrong on a Greek debt haircut

Volker Wieland, a member of the German Council of Economic Experts and chair of the Institute for Monetary Theory and Policy at Goethe University, told CNBC Wednesday that any relaxation in the payments by Greece would not be urgent.

August 19, 2015 / 22:04 IST
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With Greece on the verge of receiving yet more aid from its international creditors, thanks to German lawmakers overwhelmingly backing the deal Wednesday, experts have challenged assertions from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that the country's debt is unsustainable without a massive restructuring.

Volker Wieland, a member of the German Council of Economic Experts and chair of the Institute for Monetary Theory and Policy at Goethe University, told CNBC Wednesday that any relaxation in the payments by Greece would not be urgent.

"The cost of bearing the debt is very low for Greece, precisely because much of the interest and repayment has already been postponed. The only debt which is particularly expensive, except for short term bills, is the IMF debt," he said.

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The euro zone has agreed to lend Athens another 86 billion euros (USD 95 billion) in a new bailout program that is still being ratified by some European parliaments. One issue surrounding the latest negotiations is the involvement that the IMF will have, with the organization continuously stating that Greece's debt is unsustainable and needs relief on its existing borrowings.

Germany has traditionally has been resolutely against any debt restructuring for Greece with the country's politicians usually taking a hard line on austerity too.