The International Monetary Fund late Thursday approved a one-year, $1.8 billion loan program for Greece but will not release any funds until the eurozone agrees on a debt relief plan, in a highly unusual compromise step. The approval in principle means the loan "will become effective only after the Fund receives specific and credible assurances from Greece's European partners to ensure debt sustainability, and provided that Greece's economic program remains on track," the IMF said in a statement
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said Greece and Europe will need to agree on a debt plan "soon." "As we have said many times, even with full program implementation, Greece will not be able to restore debt sustainability and needs further debt relief from its European partners," Lagarde said. The new IMF loan "is contingent on this agreement on debt relief."
But unlike many previous instances when this format has been used, the fund did not set a deadline for fulfilling the missing criteria, in this case a debt relief plan. Delia Velculescu, IMF mission chief for Greece, told reporters the sides "agreed today not to set a deadline to avoid setting expectations" that, if unfulfilled, could create "deep market disruptions." But she said there has been "good progress" made in the talks between Athens and Brussels.
Once a debt plan is in place for Greece, the IMF board will have to once again give its approval in order to release any funds. The precautionary standby loan will expire on August 31, 2018, shortly after the expiration of the European Stability Mechanism program. Lagarde said the loan "provides both breathing space to mobilize support for the deeper structural reforms that Greece needs to prosper within the euro area, and a framework for Greece's European partners to deliver further debt relief to restore Greece's debt sustainability."