2010 revelations and IMF bailout Despite the crisis, the Greek government's bond auction in January 2010 of €8bn 5-year bonds was 4x over-subscribed. The next auction (March) sold €5bn in 10-year bonds reached 3x. However, yields (interest rates) increased, which worsened the deficit. In April 2010, it was estimated that up to 70% of Greek government bonds were held by foreign investors, primarily banks. In April, following publication of GDP data which showed an intermittent period of recession starting in 2007,
credit rating agencies then downgraded Greek bonds to
junk status in late April 2010. This froze private capital markets, and put Greece in danger of
sovereign default without a bailout. On 2 May, the
European Commission,
European Central Bank (ECB) and
International Monetary Fund (IMF) (the
Troika) launched a bailout loan to rescue Greece from
sovereign default and cover its financial needs through June 2013, conditional on implementation of
austerity measures, structural reforms and privatization of government assets. The bailout loans were mainly used to pay for the maturing bonds, but also to finance the continued yearly budget deficits.
Fraudulent statistics, revisions and controversies To keep within the
monetary union guidelines, the government of Greece for many years simply misreported economic statistics. The areas in which Greece's deficit and debt statistics did not follow common European Union rules spanned about a dozen different areas outlined and explained in two European Commission/Eurostat reports, from January 2010 (including its very detailed and candid annex) and from November 2010. For example, at the beginning of 2010, it was discovered that Goldman Sachs and other banks had arranged financial transactions involving the use of derivatives to reduce the Greek government's nominal foreign currency debt, in a manner that the banks claim was consistent with EU debt reporting rules, but which others have argued were contrary at the very least to the spirit of the reporting rules of such instruments. Christoforos Sardelis, former head of Greece's
Public Debt Management Agency, said that the country did not understand what it was buying. He also said he learned that "other EU countries such as Italy" had made similar deals (while similar cases were reported for other countries, including Belgium, Portugal, and even Germany). Such off market swaps were not originally registered as debt because
Eurostat statistics did not include such financial derivatives until March 2008, when Eurostat issued a Guidance note that instructed countries to record as debt such instruments. A German derivatives dealer commented, "The
Maastricht rules can be circumvented quite legally through swaps", and "In previous years, Italy used a similar trick to mask its true debt with the help of a different US bank." However, while in 2008 other EU countries with such off-market swaps declared them to Eurostat and went back to correct their debt data (with reservations and disputes remaining), The Finance Ministry accepted the need to restore trust among investors and correct methodological flaws, "by making the National Statistics Service an independent legal entity and phasing in, during the first quarter of 2010, all the necessary checks and balances". The figure for Greek government debt at the end of 2009 increased from its first November estimate at (113% of GDP) to a revised (127% of GDP). He was cleared of charges of inflating Greece's deficit in February 2019. It has been argued by many international as well as Greek observers that "despite overwhelming evidence that Mr. Georgiou correctly applied EU rules in revising Greece's fiscal deficit and debt figures, and despite strong international support for his case, some Greek courts continued the witch hunt." The combined corrections lead to an increase of the Greek public debt by
about 10%. Following the
financial audit of the fiscal years 2006–2009 Eurostat announced in November 2010 that the revised figures for 2006–2009 finally were considered to be reliable.
2011 A year later, a worsened recession along with the poor performance of the Greek government in achieving the conditions of the agreed bailout, forced a second bailout. In July 2011, private creditors agreed to a voluntary haircut of 21 percent on their Greek debt, but Eurozone officials considered this write-down to be insufficient. Especially
Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister, and
Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, "pushed private creditors to accept a 50 percent loss on their Greek bonds", while
Jean-Claude Trichet of the European Central Bank had long opposed a haircut for private investors, "fearing that it could undermine the vulnerable European banking system". On 17 October 2011,
Minister of Finance Evangelos Venizelos announced that the government would establish a new fund, aimed at helping those who were hit the hardest from the government's austerity measures. The money for this agency would come from a crackdown on
tax evasion. but receipts were much lower than expected, while the policy was strongly opposed by the left-wing political party,
Syriza. In 2014, only €530m was raised. Some key assets were sold to insiders.
2012 The second bailout programme was ratified in February 2012. A total of was to be transferred in regular tranches through December 2014. The recession worsened and the government continued to dither over bailout program implementation. In December 2012 the Troika provided Greece with more debt relief, while the IMF extended an extra €8.2bn of loans to be transferred from January 2015 to March 2016.
2014 The fourth review of the bailout programme revealed unexpected financing gaps. In 2014 the outlook for the Greek economy was optimistic. The government predicted a
structural surplus in 2014, opening access to the private lending market to the extent that its entire financing gap for 2014 was covered via private
bond sales. Instead a fourth recession started in Q4-2014. The parliament called
snap parliamentary elections in December, leading to a
Syriza-led government that rejected the existing bailout terms. Like the previous Greek governments, the Syriza-led government was met with the same response from Troika, "
Pacta sunt servanda" (agreements must be kept). The Troika suspended all scheduled remaining aid to Greece, until the Greek government retreated or convinced the Troika to accept a revised programme. This rift caused a liquidity crisis (both for the Greek government and Greek financial system), plummeting stock prices at the
Athens Stock Exchange and a renewed loss of access to private financing.
2015 Following
Greece's January snap election, the Troika granted a further four-month technical extension of its bailout programme; expecting that the payment terms would be renegotiated before the end of April, allowing for the review and the last financial transfer to be completed before the end of June. Facing sovereign default, the government made new proposals in the first and second half of June. Both were rejected, raising the prospect of recessionary
capital controls to avoid a
collapse of the banking sector – and
Greek exit from the Eurozone. The government unilaterally broke off negotiations on 26 June. Greek prime minister
Alexis Tsipras announced that a
referendum would be held on 5 July to approve or reject the Troika's 25 June proposal. The
Greek stock market closed on 27 June. The government campaigned for rejection of the proposal, while four opposition parties (
PASOK,
To Potami,
KIDISO and
New Democracy) objected that the proposed referendum was unconstitutional. They petitioned for the
parliament or
president to reject the referendum proposal. Meanwhile, the Eurogroup announced that the existing second bailout agreement would technically expire on 30 June, 5 days before the referendum. The Eurogroup had signaled willingness to uphold their "November 2012 debt relief promise", presuming a final agreement. On 28 June the referendum was approved by the Greek parliament with no interim bailout agreement. The
ECB decided to stop its Emergency Liquidity Assistance to Greek banks. Many Greeks continued to withdraw cash from their accounts fearing that capital controls would soon be invoked. On 5 July a 61% majority
voted to reject the bailout terms. This caused stock indexes worldwide to tumble, fearing Greece's potential exit from the Eurozone ("
Grexit"). Following the vote, Greece's finance minister
Yanis Varoufakis stepped down on 6 July, because of the Prime Minister's denial to follow the public vote and was replaced by
Euclid Tsakalotos. On 13 July, following 17 hours of negotiations, Eurozone leaders reached a provisional agreement on a third bailout programme, substantially the same as their June proposal. Many financial analysts, including the largest private holder of Greek debt, private equity firm manager,
Paul Kazarian, found issue with its findings, citing it as a distortion of net debt position.
2017 On 20 February 2017, the Greek finance ministry reported that the government's debt load had reached €226.36 billion after increasing by €2.65 billion in the previous quarter. By the middle of 2017, the yield on Greek government bonds began approaching pre-2010 levels, signalling a potential return to economic normalcy for the country. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Greece's GDP was estimated to grow by 2.8% in 2017. The
Medium-term Fiscal Strategy Framework 2018–2021 voted on 19 May 2017 introduced amendments of the provisions of the 2016
thirteenth austerity package. In June 2017, news reports indicated that the "crushing debt burden" had not been alleviated and that Greece was at the risk of defaulting on some payments. The
International Monetary Fund stated that the country should be able to borrow again "in due course". At the time, the Eurozone gave Greece another credit of $9.5-billion, $8.5 billion of loans and brief details of a possible debt relief with the assistance of the IMF. On 13 July, the Greek government sent a letter of intent to the IMF with 21 commitments it promised to meet by June 2018. They included changes in labour laws, a plan to cap public sector work contracts, to transform temporary contracts into permanent agreements and to recalculate pension payments to reduce spending on social security.
2018 On 21 June 2018, Greece's creditors agreed on a 10-year extension of maturities on 96.6 billion euros of loans (i.e. almost a third of Greece's total debt), as well as a 10-year grace period in interest and amortization payments on the same loans. Greece successfully exited (as declared) the bailouts on 20 August 2018.
2021 In March 2021, Greece sold its first 30-year bond since the
2008 financial crisis. The bond issue raised 2.5 billion euros. == Bailout programmes ==