Greece's central bank has warned for
the first time that the country could be on a "painful course" to
default and exit from both the eurozone and the EU.
It comes as
the Greek government and its international creditors blamed each other
for failing to reach a deal over economic reforms.
That failure is holding up the release of €7.2bn (£5.2bn) in bailout funds.
About €30bn was withdrawn from Greek bank deposits between October and April, the central bank added.
The central bank also warned the country's economic slowdown would accelerate without a deal.
"Failure
to reach an agreement would... mark the beginning of a painful course
that would lead initially to a Greek default and ultimately to the
country's exit from the euro area and, most likely, from the European
Union," the Bank of Greece said in a report.
"Striking an agreement with our partners is a historical imperative that we cannot afford to ignore."
Despite
the warning, Greek shares rose 0.8% in mid-morning trade on the Greek
stock exchange. The Athens benchmark index has fallen 11% since Friday,
with bank shares worst affected.
'Solidarity'
Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann was in Athens on Wednesday in a last-ditch bid to end the standoff.
"For
Europe to be stronger, it must show solidarity and support to any
country which needs it," he said during a meeting with Greek President
Prokopis Pavlopoulos.
That came ahead of a meeting of euro zone
finance ministers on Thursday although officials have played down
expectations of a make-or-break decision being reached.
The Austrian chancellor's comments followed a harsher critique from
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, who on Tuesday
accused the Greek government of misleading voters, as Greek Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras accused the EU and International Monetary Fund
(IMF) of trying to "humiliate" his country.
Greece - deal or no deal?
Option 1: No deal: Greece defaults on
IMF and ECB repayments; ECB pulls plug on emergency bank assistance
leading to run on Greek banks, capital controls and potential Grexit
Option 2: Greece agrees reform deal with creditors at last minute and avoids default, staying in euro
Option 3: No deal reached but both sides paper over cracks and Greece stays in euro for now
Greece has two weeks remaining to strike a deal with its
creditors or face defaulting on an existing €1.6bn (£1.1bn) loan
repayment due to the IMF.
The country has already rolled a €300m payment into those due on 30 June. Peston: Will ECB keep Greece afloat?
Mr Juncker said the Greek government had not told the truth about its latest reform proposals.
"I
am blaming the Greeks [for telling] things to the Greek public which
are not consistent with what I've told the Greek prime minister," Mr
Juncker said.
Mr Tsipras has said that the lenders wanted to raise VAT on electricity.
Greek debt talks: main sticking points
Greece will not accept cuts to pension
payments or public sector wages, saying two-thirds of pensioners are
either below or near the poverty line
International creditors want pension
spending cut by 1% of GDP - it accounts for 16% of Greek GDP. They say
their target is early retirement not individual pensions
EU officials say Greece has agreed to
budget surplus targets of 1% of GDP this year, followed by 2% in 2016
and 3.5% by 2018. Greece says nothing is agreed until everything is
agreed
Creditors also want a wider VAT base; Greece says it will not allow extra VAT on medicines or electricity bills
Greece complains creditors focus on
increasing taxes instead of cracking down on tax evasion; IMF is
concerned Athens is not offering credible reforms
Other Greek ministers have criticised suggestions to increase sales tax on medicines.
But
Mr Juncker said: "I'm not in favour, and the prime minister knows
that... of increasing VAT on medicaments and electricity. This would be a
major mistake."
"The debate in Greece and outside Greece would be
easier if the Greek government would tell exactly what the
Commission... are really proposing," he added.
Greek finance
Minister Yanis Varoufakis claimed that EU proposals did include VAT
increases: "Juncker either hadn't read the document he gave Tsipras - or
he read it and forgot about it."
Elsewhere in the eurozone,
Portugal's short-term borrowing costs rose sharply on Wednesday, with
yields on six-month treasury bills jumping from minus 0.002% to 0.044%
at the country's latest debt auction.
The rise came despite an
assurance to investors from Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho that
Portugal would not be "the next to fall" in the event of a Greek
default.
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