Greece: Bailout In The Mail, Not Enough Money In The Envelope

By Aireview

February 21, 2012 8:49 PM EST

A fitful reaction from the markets to the news that the second bailout of Greece is much closer after eurozone finance ministers agreed to the latest bailout package.

Most Asian markets rose, all major European markets fell and US markets were cautious. Gold and oil rose, the euro rose, then dipped.

In fact the reaction was muted. The Dow hit 13,000 for the first time since May 2008, then retreated to end the day slightly down. 

And the Australian dollar, a good global barometer for 'risk on' investing and confidence, sold off slightly overnight as investors worried about the deal working.

While the bailout grabbed the headlines, the chances of Greece being bailed out in the true sense of the phrase are receding because the 130 billion euro package won't be enough to give the stricken country long term stability.

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The package will aim to reduce Greece's debts from around 160% of GDP now to 121% by 2020. That, according to a secret report obtained by the Financial Times, is pie in the sky stuff.

Instead, it looks increasingly likely that the country will need years of 'life support' measures from the rest of Europe to survive without default.

Greece would need extra aid to cut its debts near to the official debt target 2020, given the ever-worsening state of its economy and if the government doesn't do what it has said it will to improve its finances, its debt could hit 160% by 2020, meaning its position will be unchanged from where it is now.

In other words the 130 billion or more of spending on bailout packages ($US170 billion) will have been wasted.

The country is fading from depression to become what is essentially a black hole where the cost of keeping it alive and out of default may top the 240 billion euros (or close to $A290 billion), according to a secret report detailed by the Financial Times yesterday.

The FT said the report showed that Greece's finances are in worse shape than anyone will admit and there is every chance it will need one or two more bailouts between now and 2020.

FT says that the "strictly confidential" report on Greece's debt projections prepared for eurozone finance ministers reveals Athens' rescue program is way off track and suggests the Greek government may need another bail-out once a second rescue - agreed on yesterday afternoon, Australian time, runs out.

"The 10-page debt sustainability analysis, distributed to eurozone officials last week but obtained by the Financial Times on Monday night, found that even under the most optimistic scenario, the austerity measures being imposed on Athens risk a recession so deep that Greece will not be able to climb out of the debt hole over the course of a new three-year, €170bn bail-out."

That in turns threatens the world economy and financial markets face the possibility of years of sudden leaps and falls in confidence as Greece staggers from crisis to crisis.

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