Greece Submits New Reforms, Vows to Pay IMF on Time

Pensioners take part in a anti-austerity protest in central Athens, April 1, 2015.

Greece sent an updated list of reforms to lenders Wednesday to try to unlock financial aid and avoid a default, but eurozone officials said more work was needed before new funds could be released.

Greece is weeks away from running out of cash, but its eurozone and International Monetary Fund lenders have frozen support payments until it implements reforms. Talks have bogged down over what measures the leftist-led government must take.

"We sent a new document today to the Brussels Group [of EU/IMF lenders] which is more specific and quantified,'' a Greek finance ministry official told reporters, noting that labor and pension reform were the main sticking points in negotiations.

Eurozone officials said, however, that institutions representing the lenders — the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF — got the list too late for it to be discussed by eurozone deputy finance ministers at a teleconference on Greece on Wednesday afternoon.

One eurozone official familiar with the content of the call said recent talks on the reforms had made progress but that more work was needed for a deal.

EU officials confirmed the new reform list, published by the Financial Times, was genuine, but noted it still needed more work.

"It still lacks detail and substance in many places,'' said one EU official, who is familiar with the views of the lenders but is not a policymaker.

No intent to leave EU

The 26-page document states clearly that Greece considers itself an irrevocable member of the single currency area, making clear it had no intention of exiting the eurozone or the European Union.

It says that the country's financing needs in 2015 are 19 billion euros ($20 billion). It expects to get 1.5 billion euros from selling off state assets, a far cry from the 4 billion envisaged by the agreement with the previous government.

The government pledges to crack down on tax fraud, raise taxes on luxuries and review asset sales on a case-by-case basis. It also proposes reintroducing an extra payment for poor pensioners and a gradual hike in the minimum wage, and retention of government administration staffing levels.

Discussions on the reforms between Greece and the representatives of the creditors are scheduled to continue next week, officials said.

A payment to the IMF of about 430 million euros due next week is shaping up to be the next financial test for Greece, which is already resorting to last-ditch measures like borrowing from state entities to tide it over through the cash crunch.

In an interview with German daily Der Spiegel, Interior Minister Nikos Voutsis said that if foreign creditors do not send Athens further funds by April 9, the government would first pay salaries and pensions and then come to an agreement with lenders on paying the IMF late.

'No chance' of missed payment

But Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' government, which was elected in January on promises to ease the terms of the bailout and cut debt, said the comments did not represent its stance.

"There is no chance that Greece will not meet its obligations to the IMF on April 9,'' government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis told Reuters.

Labor Minister Panos Skourletis said a planned visit by Tsipras to Moscow next week was "to find out whether our historic friendship with Russia can be stretched to other levels,'' German newspaper Die Zeit reported.

"We'd like to stay on the ship called Europe,'' Skourletis was quoted as saying. "But if the captain pushes us overboard, we need to try to swim.''

But Athens would only reveal what role Russia might play "if nothing works anymore,'' Skourletis said.