The nation of Greece is currently in debt to its creditors to the amount of 321 billion Euros -- "approximately 180% of its annual economic output" -- effectively making the nation a debt-colony (Rankin). As of 2015, the IMF had pledged nearly 50 billion Euros to Greece (and had leant the nation more than 30 billion up to that point -- with the rest contingent upon Greece making payments that were already due). By May 2016, Greece's creditors -- known in the media as the Troika (European Commission, the ECB, and the IMF) -- were meeting to discuss the issue of loaning another 10 billion Euros to the embattled nation (Rankin).The nature of the crisis that prompted Greece to apply for aid was this: it had become a member of the EU in spite of having less than stellar fiscal discipline. It had a trade deficit and when the Great Recession struck Europe in 2009, Greece was in no condition to stabilize. Even well before the Recession, Greece's credit rating had been going down (before finally being junked in 2010). Thus, in 2010, it applied for aid to the IMF (along with the EC and ECB -- the three of which made up the Troika, promising Greece over 100 billion Euros in loans to "bail" the country out of its debt and pending sovereign default. The loan was to cover the country through 2013 and was meant to be used to cover maturing...
Essentially, the IMF helped Greece to keep from defaulting on its debts to bondholders. By 2013 the loan had tripled.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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