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No More 'Milking the Cow,' Tsipras Greece and Troika Reach Another Deal

© REUTERS / Alkis KonstantinidisGreek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras looks on before a ruling Syriza party parliamentary group session in Athens, Greece, May 6, 2016.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras looks on before a ruling Syriza party parliamentary group session in Athens, Greece, May 6, 2016. - Sputnik International
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Greece has unlocked another bailout deal from its creditors, the Troika following 11 hours of negotiations in Brussels. Athens will receive the money in two instalments, US$8.39 billion in June 2016 and US$3.1 billion three months later in September.

Eurogroup president, Jeroen Dijsselbloem said the agreement was a "major breakthrough" for the debt ridden country and that it signaled the beginning of a new phase in the Greek bailout deal.

On May 25 2016, the Eurogroup agreed to release the money on condition the government implemented "prior reforms" that had been agreed in 2010 which the Greek government and previous administrations had still failed to implement. This includes allowing the sale of all loans to private debt collection companies, selling off the old Hellenikon airport and reforming state social support.

Greece for sale - Sputnik International
After the Bailout: The Spoils of Greece Are Bound for Germany

In August 2015, Greece secured a third bailout since 2010 to the tune of US$96 billion — on condition Greece raised income tax for high earners and lowered tax-free thresholds and did away with benefits for poor pensioners — sound familiar?

In six years and three bailouts, tax reforms, privatization plans and the selling of Greek assets have been promised but failed to materialize. Often met with political resistance and violent protests from anti-austerity campaigners who are struggling to survive in a country where a quarter of the population are unemployed.

And never immune from being told by Brussels to pull its socks up, Greece has been reprimanded again by European politicians for not implementing reforms and tax laws to ensure the country can "stand on its own two feet."

Guy Verhofstadt, Belgium politician and leader of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) has accused Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras of "continuing the policies of his predecessors," which is to "produce law, but fail to implement them."

"They are milking the cow, just like previous governments have done. I don't see any difference," Verhofstadt said.

"In the meantime nothing is done about corruption, making Greece more competitive or creating a society that can become more competitive and prosperous again. The clientelistic system continues to thrive."

​The Greek government owes its creditors, the Troika, more than US$335 billion. With eye-watering debts like that, it's expected that Eurogroup financiers will be making sure Tsipras is not "milking the cow," but selling the family silver instead.  

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