Greece Denies $26 Billion Budget Shortfall

September 24, 2012 by Trey Thoelcke

The Greek Ministry of Finance has denied reports that the country must close a 20 billion euro ($26 billion) budget shortfall in order to meet requirements from international lenders. German magazine Der Spiegel reported the shortfall — almost double previous estimates — over the weekend.

A ministry representative said that Greece is negotiating a 11.5-billion-euro cut in expenditures with the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund — the so-called Troika of international lenders. The country will also find a way to raise 2 billion euros in revenue. Greece can only receive the next tranche of financial aid from its international creditors once its budget gap is closed.

A final agreement on budget cuts is not expected until next week, the ministry representative said. Greece and representatives of the country’s international lenders have agreed to take a week-long break from inconclusive talks.

European stock markets posted broad-based losses in early trading this morning, over concerns about Greece’s reported wider-than-expected budget shortfall.

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