be a forced restructuring,
contrary to what the european
central bank wants or not, these
are all open questions.
we'll get back to them on "world
business today."
let's ask specifically about
where we're going to end up with
greece now?
are we going to end up with a
default?
is this package likely to go
through that you and i were
talking about.
let's get on the line to
journalist john sur rop loss in
athens.
he joins me now.
john, clearly the vote of
confidence was something
papandreou could expect to pass
and he did pass.
no fraying at the edges.
next week's vote on this huge
package of austerity measures is
likely to be a different matter,
isn't it?
>> it is.
because the government has no
leeway to negotiate.
it's been handed down by
greece's creditors, the eu, the
european central bank and the
imf.
they have to accept it wholesale
and pass it.
it's very difficult because it
contains 4 billion euro's worth
of public sector spending cuts