Who is exposed to Greek debt? Greece owes €315.5 billion in public debt according to Eurostat. The International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank are preferential creditors, leaving eurozone governments as the most exposed ---------------------------------------------------- Tradable debt: €82.14bn Greece must repay €11bn – €7bn in loans and almost €4bn in interest – in 2015 €27.05bn ECB €40.47bn Long-term bonds Treasury bills €14.62bn IMF: Greece must repay €9.31bn in 2015 €24.27bn EFSF lending programme: Ends midnight February 28 Loan repayments do not start until 2023, with final repayment due in 2053. Greece pays about 1.5% interest on loans €141.80bn European Financial Stability Facility Eurozone bilateral loans: Greece must pay €292.5m in interest in 2015 €52.90bn Greek Loan Facility Other: €331.1m interest in 2015 €14.39bn Loan and interest payments in 2015: €20.93bn €194.7bn Combined loans from EFSF and Greek Loan Facility (2010-14) Germany €56.47bn €31.7bn* Benefit for Greece from extending maturity on loans by 10 years and cutting interest payments to zero France €42.39bn Italy €37.31bn Spain €24.75bn Netherlands €11.89bn Belgium €7.24bn Austria €5.75bn Other €8.89bn --------------------------------------------- Sources: Eurostat, Natixis, Bruegel, Bloomberg *Calculation by Bruegel economic think tank words 185