Monday, July 13, 2015

CHUCK KOLB 07/13/2015

Breaking Bailout - Euros to Greeks !!!

One senior EU official calculated the cost to the Greek state of the
last two weeks of political and economic turmoil at 25 to 30 billion euros.
A euro zone diplomat said the full damage might be closer to 50 billion euros.


Previously posted ...
WW III UPDATE - Vienna Iran Decision !!!

http://conpats.blogspot.com/2015/07/chuck-kolb-07122015.html

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Thanks - Blessedone 333
3rd temple about to be built?


Third Temple News - Red Heifer July 12th 2015
Evangelist Anita Fuentes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAnoh2tjLJU (15:09)
https://www.youtube.com/user/PureGraceEvangelism
https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Temple-Institute/22738684968


Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name: That at the name of Jesus
every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; And that every tongue
should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

Philippians 2:9-11 KJV



Breaking Bailout - Euros to Greeks !!!






Deal on Greek Debt Crisis Is Reached, but Long Road Remains
by James Kanter and Andrew Higgins

BRUSSELS — Greece and its European creditors announced an agreement here on Monday that aims to resolve the country’s debt crisis and keep it in the eurozone, but that will require further budgetary belt-tightening that Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras could have trouble selling back in Athens.

The agreement does not guarantee that Greece will receive its third bailout in five years. But it does allow the start of detailed negotiations on a new assistance package for Greece.

One open question is whether the deal gives enough confidence to the European Central Bank to let it continue channeling sorely needed emergency funding to Greek banks, which have been hollowed out by a long economic slump and the withdrawal of billions of euros in recent months by account holders.

The tough terms, demanded by Germany and others, are meant to balance Greece’s demands for a loan repayment system that will not keep it mired in recession and austerity budgets, against creditors’ insistence that loans worth tens of billions of euros not be money wasted. Testy negotiations and Greece’s inability to live up to the promises made in its previous bailouts had cast a shadow of distrust over the weekend’s discussions.

An accord would end five months of bitter negotiations that raised concerns that Greece would be the first country to be forced out of the euro currency union — a development that proponents of European unity had sought desperately to avoid.

“The advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,” Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany told a news conference, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.

“The country which we help has shown a willingness and readiness to carry out reforms,” said Ms. Merkel, referring to Greece.

The total commitment of money has not been disclosed. But a document by the eurozone leaders noted that experts had estimated that Greece might need from 82 billion to 86 billion euros more — $91 billion to $96 billion — to shore up its economy, rebuild its banks and meet its debt obligations over the next three years. The document said Greece and its creditors should seek to “reduce that financing envelope,” if possible. [...]
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/14/world/europe/greece-debt-plan.html

Greece’s Debt Crisis Explained
(w embedded vid - 3:52)

by THE NEW YORK TIMES - UPDATED July 13, 2015

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/business/international/greece-debt-crisis-euro.html



Euro Zone Leaders Reach Agreement To Rescue Greece
(w embedded vid - 1:02)

by Paul Taylor and Renee Maltezou - Reuters

BRUSSELS, July 13 (Reuters) - Euro zone leaders made Greece surrender much of its sovereignty to outside supervision on Monday in return for agreeing to talks on an 86 billion euros bailout to keep the near-bankrupt country in the single currency.

The terms imposed by international lenders led by Germany in all-night talks at an emergency summit obliged leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to abandon promises of ending austerity and could fracture his government and cause an outcry in Greece.

"Clearly the Europe of austerity has won," Greece's Reform Minister George Katrougalos said.

"Either we are going to accept these draconian measures or it is the sudden death of our economy through the continuation of the closure of the banks. So it is an agreement that is practically forced upon us," he told BBC radio.

If the summit had failed, Greece would have been staring into an economic abyss with its shuttered banks on the brink of collapse and the prospect of having to print a parallel currency and exit the European monetary union.

"The agreement was laborious, but it has been concluded. There is no Grexit," European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker told a news conference after 17 hours of bargaining.

He dismissed suggestions that Tsipras had been humiliated even though the summit statement insisted repeatedly that Greece must now subject much of its public policy to prior agreement by bailout monitors.

"In this compromise, there are no winners and no losers," Juncker said. "I don't think the Greek people have been humiliated, nor that the other Europeans have lost face. It is a typical European arrangement."

Tsipras himself, elected five months ago to end five years of suffocating austerity, said he had "fought a tough battle" and "averted the plan for financial strangulation."

Greece won conditional agreement to receive a possible 86 billion euros ($95 billion) over three years, along with an assurance that euro zone finance ministers would start within hours discussing ways to bridge a funding gap until a bailout - subject to parliamentary approvals - is finally ready.

That will only happen if he can meet a tight timetable for enacting unpopular reforms of value added tax, pensions, budget cuts if Greece misses fiscal targets, new bankruptcy rules and an EU banking law that could be used to make big depositors take losses.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she could recommend "with full confidence" that the Bundestag authorize the opening of loan negotiations with Athens once the Greek parliament has approved the entire program and passed the first laws. The secretary-general of Merkel's conservatives said the Bundestag was likely to vote on Greece on Friday. [...]
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/euro-zone-greece-bailout_55a366a6e4b0ecec71bc6171

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