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Europe warns Greece to stick to austerity

Author
AAP and Frances Cook,
Publish Date
Tue, 27 Jan 2015, 5:35AM
Photo: Getty Images
Photo: Getty Images

Europe warns Greece to stick to austerity

Author
AAP and Frances Cook,
Publish Date
Tue, 27 Jan 2015, 5:35AM

UPDATED 7.36am: Greece's plan to move away from extreme austerity measures will be reliant on backing from Germany.

Yesterday's election saw Greek voters choose a far-left party, which has promised to end years of austerity.

ANZ economist Sharon Zollner told Newstalk ZB's Andrew Dickens it's a very bold promise, that will be difficult to keep.

"But of course even a generous easing in government spending would only bring it back to some kind of normal.

"They've had some very, very tough years over there and this result here is a reaction to that."

Zollner says Greece will need Germany's support if they want any easing of austerity measures.

"The problem is unless the aid money keeps flowing, then they'll b very quickly be bankrupt.

"You only have to look at Venezuela as an example of what happens when a country runs out of money."

EU issues warning

The EU has issued a stern warning to Greece that its place in the eurozone is at risk if new Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras fails to meet the country's austerity and debt commitments.

From Brussels to Berlin, officials said they were ready to talk to the new government led by Tsipras' radical left party Syriza, but insisted that Athens must stick to prior agreements with its international creditors.

Eurozone finance ministers were meeting in Brussels a day after Syriza stormed to victory in elections on the back of Tsipras' promises to end "disastrous austerity" and seek a cancellation of Greek debt.

"Membership of the eurozone means that you comply with everything you have agreed with," said Eurogroup head Jeroen Dijsselbloem, adding that "on that basis, we're ready to work with them".

The Dutch finance minister did not rule out steps to help Greece - such as extending debt repayment deadlines or reducing interest rates - so long as the new government stuck to the austerity measures it has agreed with the EU and IMF since 2010.

But he dismissed suggestions that the EU could erase some of the debts that Greece incurred under the massive 240-billion-euro ($A342 billion) international bailouts it received, as Tsipras has demanded.

"Writing off debt in nominal value, I don't think there's a lot of support for that within the eurozone," Dijsselbloem said.

The mere fact that Dijsselbloem brought up Greece's place in the 19-country eurozone will stoke fears about the effect of a Syriza win for the single currency, which traded at an 11-year low versus the dollar on Monday.

Syriza's stunning victory also has political implications beyond Greece, boosting anti-austerity movements across Europe, especially Spain's Podemos which is hoping for a similar general election win this year.

In Germany - the paymaster of the eurozone bailouts and where resistance runs deep to any attempts to abandon austerity - Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman took a similar line on what Europe expected.

"In our view it is important for the new government to take action to foster Greece's continued economic recovery," spokesman Steffen Seibert told reporters. "That also means Greece sticking to its previous commitments."

European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said that the EU would "work closely" with Greece, adding that he was not "particularly nervous".

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