Schaeuble
Germany's Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble talks to the media as he arrives at a European Union finance ministers meeting in Brussels on Jan. 24. Reuters/Francois Lenoir

Greek promises on austerity measures are no longer good enough because so many vows have been broken and the country that has been a bottomless pit has to dramatically change its ways, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said.

In a hard-hitting interview with the Welt am Sonntag newspaper published on Sunday, Schaeuble also said it is up to Greece whether the country can stay in the Eurozone as part of its efforts to restore its competitiveness.

The promises from Greece aren't enough for us anymore, Schaeuble said. With a new austerity program, they are going to first have to implement parts of the old program and save.

Schaeuble pointed out that German opinion polls show a majority of Germans are willing to help Greece. But it's important to say that it cannot be a bottomless pit. That's why the Greeks have to finally close that pit. And then we can put something in there. At least people are now starting to realize it won't work with a bottomless pit.

Schaeuble said Greece would be supported one way or another, but warned the country needed to do its homework on improving its competitiveness and hinted it might have to leave the Eurozone to do that.

Greece needs to do its own homework to become competitive -- whether that happens in conjunction with a new rescue program or by another route that we actually don't want to take ...

When asked if that meant Greece would leave the Eurozone for that, Schaeuble said: That is all in the hands of the Greeks themselves. But even in the event [Greece leaves the Eurozone], which almost no one assumes will happen, they will still remain part of Europe.

Schaeuble said Germany, the Eurozone's paymaster, wants to prevent that. We're happy to help, but we shouldn't give others the feeling that they don't have work hard themselves. Every country is responsible for itself.

He said that the rescue efforts for Greece are turning out to be more difficult than efforts associated with German reunification in 1990.

The reason is the realization that there is a need for change, and change dramatically, still needs to develop further with a lot of people in Greece, said Schaeuble, who was a key government architect of German reunification.

Schaeuble said there was quite a difference between Greece and other Eurozone strugglers. The Greeks are a special case...The Portuguese government is doing a decent job, he said, adding that Portugal's problem is that the country needs more economic growth.

Our goal is to help give Greece a future by making it fit and competitive so that the people there have their chances, he said. But the path is going to be difficult.

(Reporting by Erik Kirschbaum; Editing by Michael Roddy)