EIB to revoke drachma clauses
By Chryssa Liaggou
European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Olli Rehn
said drachma clauses being inserted by the European Investment Bank
(EIB) into new loan agreements with Greek companies are “unfortunate.”
The
Commission has put pressure on the lender to withdraw all clauses that
relate to a possible Greek exit from the eurozone or the collapse of the
euro area in general. Its intervention appears to have borne fruit.
According
to sources, Rehn met this week with his Greek colleague, Maria
Damanaki, and informed her of his personal disagreement with the EIB
requirements. He also reported that the bank’s governor, Werner Hoyer,
had promised that the the clauses will be removed from the agreements.
The
same sources told Kathimerini that the Finnish commissioner branded the
terms “bureaucratic” and the EIB’s intention to impose them
”unfortunate and incomprehensible.”
Rehn’s intervention followed a
letter from Damanaki informing him of a report run by Kathimerini a few
days ago about the insistence of EIB to include drachma clauses in the
70-million-euro loan it agreed with Public Power Corporation, Greece’s
main electricity producer, for a new plant at Megalopoli.
Damanaki
cited the report by Kathimerini in her letter to Rehn, suggesting that
the EIB initiative was arbitrary and running counter to the Commission’s
position, and particularly to its recent statement about growth in
Greece. She added that it was at least unfortunate that while the
eurozone has agreed to lend Greece 130 billion euros, the main funding
branch of the European Union disputes, if indirectly, Greece’s future in
the eurozone. |
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