German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said in a magazine interview
published on Saturday that Greece would not be able to return to capital markets
next year and would need a decade to make its economy competitive.
Schaeuble told business weekly WirtschaftsWoche that it was "clear that
Greece will not be able to return to capital markets in 2012, as we thought in
2010."
"Greece will need a decade rather than a year to get fully competitive,"
added the minister from Chancellor Angela Merkel's center-right government.
With anxiety about a possible Greek sovereign debt default rising in Europe,
the chief economist of German insurer Allianz (ALVG.DE) said a major haircut for
Greek government bondholders would only increase the risk of contagion in the
euro zone.
"I don't believe the time is right for a debt haircut like this," Michael
Heise told German radio, in response to Greek media reports -- denied by Athens
on Friday -- that one option was an orderly default with a 50 percent haircut
for creditors.
The economist said such a default scenario would create more problems and
increase the risk of contagion to other euro zone countries, which would create
"a very, very serious situation."
Athens denied reports in two Greek newspapers that Finance Minister Evangelos
Venizelos had outlined various options to lawmakers, including a bailout by
Europe and the International Monetary Fund, a haircut and a disorderly
default.
Merkel said on Friday that a Greek default was "not an option for me" as the
damage was "impossible to predict."
With heavily-indebted Italy also giving increasing cause for concern, her
finance minister Schaeuble said in the interview Italy was "a strong country
with good economic data."
"Italy's debts are manageable and could be brought back into the guidelines
relatively quickly," he said, adding that the downgrading by rating agency
Standard & Poor's could prove beneficial by encouraging Italy "to implement
the already decided measures more quickly and urgently."
But Italian Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti suggested on Friday that the
ball was in Germany's court and the European economic powerhouse had to overcome
its own "uncertainties" about whether to save the currency union.
"Now everything depends on Europe, and Europe depends on Germany, and that
depends on the capacity Germany must have to overcome its uncertainties and
understand that Europe is in everyone's interests, including theirs," he told
Italian TV.
He appeared to be referring to a threatened revolt among some members of
parliament in Merkel's coalition on a crucial vote on the European Financial
Stability Facility -- the euro zone's current bailout mechanism -- in Berlin on
September 29.
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