Cyprus confirmed on Thursday that the cost of its EU-IMF bailout has surged to 23 billion euros ($30 billion) from 17.5 billion euros, putting the already teetering economy in danger of collapse and further endangering large bank depositors. "It's a fact the memorandum of November talked about 17.5 billion (euros) in financing needs. And it has emerged this figure has become 23 billion," said government spokesman Christos Stylianides.
That means Cyprus will now have to find 6.0 billion euros more than the 7.0 billion euros mooted in a preliminary agreement reached on March 25 in order to secure an EU-IMF contribution of 10 billion euros. Under the preliminary terms of a bailout agreed last month, Cyprus will drastically reduce the size of its bloated banking sector, raise taxes, downsize the public sector workforce and privatise some state-owned firms.
Stylianides was commenting on a new assessment of Cyprus's financing needs that eurozone finance ministers, including that of Cyprus, are to discuss in Dublin from Friday in a bid to reach a final deal. A source close to the talks said "the financing needs of Cyprus have evolved. Notably, while the restructuring of the financial sector will now be very largely financed through private means, the projected fiscal needs of the state have increased as a result of the deeper-than-expected recession."
A copy of the assessment obtained by AFP says the European Commission and European Central Bank now estimate that "Cyprus's gross financing needs amount to about (23 billion euros) over the three-year programme horizon" through the first quarter of 2016. "This includes needs for the recapitalisation of the banking sector, the redemption of maturing medium- and long-term debt, including loans and fiscal needs."
Under the March deal, failed lender Laiki Bank is being wound up and its healthy assets transferred to the Bank of Cyprus. To cover part of Cyprus's revenue-raising needs, there was talk that customers with deposits of more than 100,000 euros at Bank of Cyprus could lose up to 60 percent of those holdings. That figure could now be even higher. Those in Laiki will have to wait years to see any of their money over 100,000 euros.
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