The IMF's engagement in Greece is no longer necessary with the EU capable of resolving the situation alone, a senior figure in the European Central Bank was quoted as saying Wednesday. "Economically speaking, the IMF is no longer necessary for Greece's stabilisation," said Ewald Nowotny, head of Austria's central bank and an ECB Governing Council member.
"This is a problem that the EU can resolve on its own," Nowotny told Austrian daily Die Presse in an interview. His comments came after WikiLeaks released what it said was a transcript of a phone conversation between IMF officials expressing frustration at Greece's slow pace enacting reforms.
The document published by the whistle-blowing website quoted the officials as suggesting in a March 19 conversation that Greece needed a "crisis event" to spur it into action. The IMF has yet to officially sign onto Greece's latest bailout, the third, agreed in July, making its participation conditional on Athens not backtracking on reform promises. Leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who last year said the IMF bore "criminal responsibility" for Greece's painful austerity cuts, wrote to IMF chief Christine Lagarde to complain. She replied in a published letter that any speculation "that IMF staff would consider using a credit event as a negotiating tactic is simply nonsense".
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