No amount of debt forgiveness on the bailout will fix Greece unless they restructure. Because we'll just be back here again in 25 years time when the bonds they deferred for 30 years expire and Greece is still carrying 175% (and climbing), of GDP, debt.
It's all going the wrong way. Greece has 25 years to reduce it's debt from 175% or so, down to below 100%. This is not going to happen and the $200bn or so of bonds which are zero interest bonds will have to be exchanged for interest bearing bonds. Which Greece will not be able to do whilst still carrying more than 100% of GDP in debt.
So the EU has to force Greece to adhere to the plan and produce a budget surplus which will, over the next 25 years, allow them to reduce their primary debt enough to cover the 30 year bond fudge done in 2012.
In other words, there is a crunch coming one way or another. There are two options. Syriza capitulates. Or. Greece defaults. The fairy story of Greece passing enough laws to write down their debt enough to swap all those 30 year bonds for newer short term debt in 25 years time is just that, a fairy story.
The article I linked is clear on one thing..
The timing and design
of the restructuring left money on the table from the perspective of Greece, created a large risk for European taxpayers,
and set precedents—particularly in its very generous treatment of holdout creditors—that are likely to make future debt
restructurings in Europe more difficult..
The two points there are the risk to European tax payers and the generous treatment of holdout creditors.
The EU taxpayers (including the UK), have funded the fudge. The holdout creditors were mainly German and French banks who could not be allowed to fail. Hence the "very generous" settlement for them.
So, in the end, the restructuring fixed the rest of the EU and left the Greeks hung out to dry funding it. The IMF wanted a much deeper default and for creditors to bear the bulk of the restructuring. This was unacceptable to the EU and, especially, the ECB who could have failed due to the fallout.
In light of that information, the position of the EU finance ministers is not quite as honest and above board as we are led to believe.