Greece on track to repay last of IMF loans by end of March

·

By Eleni Patsalides.

Greek Finance Minister, Christos Staikouras, told Reuters on Monday that Greece will repay the final portions of bailout loans owed to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) by the end of March, two years ahead of schedule. 

Greece received more than 260 billion euros in bailout loans from the European Union and the IMF during the decade-long financial crisis. It has exclusively relied on bond markets for its financing needs since leaving its third bailout in 2018. 

Since 2018, it has made multiple early repayments to the IMF and now owes 1.9 billion euros in loans by 2024. This amount is the last batch of a total of 28 billion euros that the Washington-based fund provided to Greece between 2010 and 2014. 

“Greece has officially submitted a request for the full prepayment of the outstanding balance of its IMF loans. The relevant procedure has been launched and is expected to be completed at the end of March,” Staikouras told Reuters in an interview

With public debt seen at almost 190 percent of gross domestic product this year, Greece remains the euro region’s most indebted nation. 

The repayment is expected to help the nation’s capital, Athens, reduce the debt by 1 percent and save almost 50 million euros in interest payments. 

Staikouras stated that despite the increase in spending to cope with the impact of COVID-19, Greece has implemented “a prudent and responsible fiscal policy and an insightful debt issuing strategy.” 

Staikouras said stronger growth and higher budget revenues will allow the country to return next year to a surplus in the primary budget, which excludes debt servicing costs. 

“Regarding 2023 onwards, we will shift towards the achievement of realistic primary surpluses,” he said.

Source: Investing, Reuters  

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Paul Nicolaou criticises Sydney’s fare-free Monday after rail chaos

Business Sydney executive director Paul Nicolaou has criticised the NSW government’s decision to offer fare-free travel on Monday.

Michael Pavlou recalls ‘panic’ during machete brawl at Melbourne shopping centre

Melbourne father Michael Pavlou described scenes of “panic” and “confusion” during a violent incident at Northland Shopping Centre on Sunday.

Olympiacos clinches Euroleague bronze over Panathinaikos in all-Greek showdown

Olympiacos defeated reigning champions Panathinaikos BC 97-93 in the Euroleague 2025 third-place game on Sunday in Abu Dhabi.

Yiayia’s passion for science inspires granddaughter Voula Gaganis

It has been a few decades in the making, but Voula Gaganis has been guided by her yiayia’s own dream of a career in science.

From South Melbourne to European glory: Ange Postecoglou’s Greek Australian masterpiece

Ange Postecoglou’s Tottenham have done it—breaking a 17-year trophy drought with a 1-0 Europa League final win over Manchester United.

You May Also Like

Ancient artefacts from US billionaire’s private collection displayed for first time in Athens

Fifteen ancient Greek artefacts from the private Cycladic art collection of a US billionaire went on display for the first time in Athens.

COVIDSafe app updated to include Greek language function

The COVIDSafe app has been updated today to include Greek in addition to Arabic, Cantonese, Italian, Korean, Mandarin and Vietnamese.

Greek youth in Perth hold meeting with Secretary General for Greeks Abroad

General Secretary for Greeks Abroad and Public Diplomacy, Professor John Chrysoulakis, has held his first meeting with diaspora in Australia.