Greece Said to Need 45 Billion Euros in New EU, IMF Loans
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European governments and the International Monetary Fund would lend as much as an extra 45 billion euros ($65 billion) to Greece under an expanded plan to avoid the euro area’s first sovereign default, two people with direct knowledge of the talks said.
European estimates put Greece’s 2012-14 financing gap at as much as 170 billion euros, the people said. It would be filled by the loans, plus around 57 billion euros in unspent aid from last year’s bailout, roughly 30 billion euros in asset-sale proceeds and about 30 billion euros in rollovers by creditors.