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Home / Business / Economy

EU denies it knew about budget woes

Bloomberg
16 Feb, 2010 03:00 PM2 mins to read

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BRUSSELS - A dispute is unfolding about how long European Union officials have known Greece used derivatives to conceal its growing budget deficit.

Greece turned to Goldman Sachs Group in 2002, just after adopting the euro, to get US$1 billion ($1.43 billion) in funding through a swap on US$10 billion of debt, Christoforos Sardelis, head of Greece's Public Debt Management Agency at the time, said last week.

Eurostat, the EU's statistics office, was aware of the plan, he said.

"Eurostat was not until recently aware of this alleged currency swap transaction made by Greece," spokesman Johan Wullt said by email on Monday.

The disagreement about who knew what and when comes amid the worst crisis in the euro's 11-year history.

The existence of the swaps, which allowed Greece to delay payments and shrink its reported budget deficit, is fuelling questions about whether Greece used the contracts to mask the fact it was struggling to comply with the currency's membership criteria.

"Greece falsified deficit statistics, and that can't be legal," said Wolfgang Gerke, president of the Bavarian Centre of Finance in Munich.

"Greece needs to be kicked out of the EU because otherwise there will be new copycats, and that could lead to the next catastrophe on financial markets."

EU regulators pressed Greece yesterday to disclose details of currency swaps after an inquiry by the country's finance ministry uncovered a series of agreements with banks that it may have used to conceal mounting debt.

One issue is whether Greece was legally obliged at the time to notify Eurostat.

Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said on Monday the use of swaps was "at the time legal".

The contracts are now no longer legal, and Greece doesn't use them, he said.

Eurostat has required information about swaps since 2007, Wullt said.

EU regulators have blessed the use of derivatives contracts to let countries curb their deficits.

European politicians this week criticised Goldman Sachs for arranging the Greek swap and are pressing for more disclosure.

- BLOOMBERG

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