Latest update: 06/04/2011 

- debt - eurozone - Portugal


Portugal's outgoing PM asks EU for financial help

Portugal's outgoing PM asks EU for financial help

Portugal’s outgoing Prime Minister has decided to seek financial help from the European Union to resolve its massive debt crisis, despite having resisted a bailout for months.

By News Wires (text)
 

AFP - Portugal on Wednesday said it had decided to request financial assistance from the European Union to resolve its debt problems amid growing speculation that it needs a bailout.

Having resisted for months pressure from the markets as well as European partners, outgoing Prime Minister Jose Socrates in a televised address justified the request as needed after parliament rejected his new austerity programme which, he said, "aggravated in a dramatic way the country's financial situation."

"I am firmly convinced that that is going to be further aggravated if nothing is done," added Socrates, who resigned on March 23 after parliament's rejection, opening the way for new elections set for June 5.

The European Commission confirmed the move.

"The Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates, today (Wednesday) informed the President of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso of the intention of Portugal to ask for the activation of the financial support mechanisms," a statement said.

"The President of the European Commission assured that this request will be processed in the swiftest possible manner, according to the rules applicable.

The statement also said that Barroso "reaffirms on this occasion his confidence in Portugal's capacity to overcome the present difficulties, with the solidarity of its partners."

Portuguese Finance Minister Fernando Teixeira dos Santos earlier admitted that his country would have to use EU mechanisms.

"I believe it is necessary to have recourse to the financing mechanisms which are available within the European context," Teixeira dos Santos said in written replies to questions submitted by business daily Jornal de Negocios.

"The country has been pushed, in an irresponsible manner, into a difficult situation on the financial markets," the minister said, referring to the rejected austerity programme which brought down the government.

"Faced with this difficult situation, which could have been avoided, I believe it is necessary to have recourse to the financing mechanisms available within Europe, adapted to the current political situation," he said.

"Such an approach would also require the involvement of the main political groups and political institutions," he added in comments posted on the newspaper's website.

There had been mounting speculation that Portugal would need outside help to resolve its debt problems as the markets piled the pressure on, demanding ever higher rates of return to invest in new government debt instruments.

Earlier Wednesday, Portugal had to pay sky-high interest rates on its latest bond sale while insisting it would meet upcoming debt repayments and that it was not in talks on securing a bridging loan to tide it over to June 5 polls.

The treasury raised 1.005 billion euros ($1.437 billion) at the sale but the average yield, or rate of return earned by investors, jumped to 5.902 percent on the 12-month bills from 4.331 percent at the last such auction on March 16.

For the six-month paper, the rate soared to 5.11 percent from 2.984 percent.

"Portugal has once again managed to sell its debt but the rates are prohibitive," said Filipe Silva, a strategist at the Banco Carregosa.

Portugal must repay some 4.2 billion euros ($6.0 billion) of debt by April 15 and another 4.9 billion euros ($7.0 billion) by June 15.

"While we believe that the country has sufficient funds available for next Friday's redemption, we doubt that it is capable -- at the moment -- of meeting the June obligation," analysts at Lloyds Bank Corporate Markets told Dow Jones Newswires.

Significantly, Germany, the eurozone's paymaster, said Lisbon would only be able to approach the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF) for help, ruling out any effort to arrange a bridging loan.

The EFSF was set up last year after fellow struggling eurozone member Greece had to be bailed out by the EU and International Monetary Fund and was used to mount a similar rescue for Ireland in November.

The finance ministry had insisted Portugal would meet its debt payments.

"The current interest rates lead to the conclusion that the damage caused by the rejection of the (austerity) plan is irreparable," it said earlier in a statement, insisting the country was "able to meet its scheduled financial commitments."

Moody's Investors Service on Tuesday downgraded Portugal's ratings by a notch from A3 to Baa1 and warned that it expected the country to have to seek outside help to resolve its debt problems.

"Pressure on Portugal to ask for external aid is mounting both internally and externally," said Tullia Bucco, an analyst at UniCredit.

The government had earlier denied that it had launched negotiations with its European partners to obtain emergency funding.

"The information is false. These are only rumours without foundation. We deny them, there no type of contact at all," a official in the Socrates' office told AFP earlier Wednesday.

Comments (1)

Globalization is futile, will result in world wide suffering

What do bailouts do first and formost: Give billions of dollars to the wealthy few in hopes they will invest in the people, in the country. This is never done, they just play all sorts of convoluted financial and market "games" with the bailout money.

Sooner than the "believers", most of them misguided petite bourgeoisie and even workers, in global capitalism will be prepared for, the bottom will fall out of the whole capitalist system. Yet the exploitive, despicable wealthy few(their "charitable" and humanitarian "contributions"--tax write offs to mostly self serving nonprofit orgs-- notwithstanding)will be protected.

But when the primary energy source, fossil fuels, which power the digital game playing with other people's hard earned money, and propel the insane transportation of vital goods thousands of miles, runs out, the massess will indeed have no other choice but to revolt. Anarchy will break out when the lights go out, refrigerators spoil food, and all forms of personal and mass transport sit still. Much of the anxiety and rage will be directed at each other within the massess. Then the banksters and billionaire entrepreneurs, billionaire wall street speculators, real estate developers, walmartization of retail fat cats will go the way of Marie Antoinette.

A large public works program, especially one that includes all a nation's intellectual and normal capital towards the development of solar power, is a much better way of continuing beneficial civilization for its citizens. But it is doubtful that this will occur, not at least in the USA where their is the human and material capital to do such a thing.

What countries, regions and communities should start doing right now is setting up resource based economies rather than market and monetary which have been in place far too long. Economies must become localized and self sufficient to avoid the inevitable loss of fossil fuel powered transportation of goods and services. China can no longer be the workshop of the world if the rest of the world wants to survive. We must manufacture all our necessities within our nation states, and the more local all around self sufficient economy is, the better. This also requires making things that last since the more local the more precious are the materials.

dahszil
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usa

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