If the eurozone country sticks to its agreement with the European Union to increase its budget surplus to 3.5 per cent, contrary to the IMF's recommendation, then it cannot blame the fund if it must impose more austerity to do so, the officials said in a blog post yesterday.
IMF chief economist Maurice Obstfeld, and European Department Director Poul Thomsen, who has been heavily involved with the negotiations with Greece, used the blog to defend the IMF against misinformation they say "turns the truth upside down."
But in fact, "The IMF is not demanding more austerity," they said. "We have not changed our view that Greece does not need more austerity at this time. Claiming that it is the IMF who is calling for this turns the truth upside down."
On the contrary, the fund warned Greek officials against trying to push for a larger primary surplus - the surplus on the public finances before debt repayments - than the 1.5 per cent the IMF said was achievable.
"We think that these cuts have already gone too far, but the ESM program assumes even more of them," Obstfeld and Thomsen wrote.
Eurozone finance ministers a week ago approved new debt relief measures to alleviate Greece's colossal debt in the wake of its huge 86-billion-euro (USD 91.5 billion) bailout, but the short-term measures, while welcome, fall short of what the IMF has said is needed.
In their blog the officials repeated that "Greece's debt is highly unsustainable and no amount of structural reforms will make it sustainable again without significant debt relief.
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