The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) will start
investing in Greece on a temporary basis in response to a request from
the Greek authorities for the Bank to support reforms and a return to
economic growth.
The EBRD’s shareholders voted for the Bank to invest in
Greece until the end of 2020.The Bank’s investments – backed by
technical assistance and policy dialogue – are intended to strengthen
progress in the reform of Greece’s economy and contribute to its
recovery.The organisation will deploy its expertise in attracting and
encouraging foreign and domestic investment, strengthening the role of
the private sector and deepening regional integration.Specifically, the
EBRD will help address the issue of insufficient capital for Greek
private companies, especially small and medium-sized enterprises. This
is a key barrier to growth, where the EBRD can contribute significantly
with its equity and commercial debt products.
The EBRD will also engage,
where possible, in expanding the private sector’s role in
infrastructure and energy. Greece is a natural trade and investment
partner for many countries in south-eastern Europe where the EBRD has a
strong presence. The Bank will support investments and policy measures
which are conducive to integration.EBRD President Sir Suma Chakrabarti
said: "We are very happy to be able to apply our particular expertise in
the private sector to the Greek economy. The EBRD will be fully engaged
to make the most of its temporary mandate in the country. By
concentrating on the private sector we are seeking to actively
contribute to the reform and recovery of the country’s economy.Greece
is a founding member of the EBRD and to date Greek companies and banks
have invested €2.3 billion in joint investments with the Bank in the
EBRD’s recipient countries, with a focus on south-eastern Europe. In
2010, under the Vienna Initiative, the EBRD supported the subsidiaries
of Greek banks in the region at the height of the global financial
crisis.
The government of Greece requested that the country be granted
EBRD recipient country status, in a letter dated 25 November 2014 which
said that EBRD engagement would "provide value-added in tackling the
consequences of the financial and economic crisis and addressing the
structural challenges in the Greek economy that it exposed”.The request
was reconfirmed by the new government on 2 February 2015. Following the
Governors’ approval the EBRD will now engage with the Greek authorities
to prepare a country strategy for Greece which will provide the
framework for its engagement and identify priorities.The EBRD also
intends to open an office in Athens.
(EBRD)