Greece will not pay a 1.6 billon euro loan installment due to the International Monetary Fund on Tuesday, a Greek government official confirmed on Monday, highlighting the depth of the financial crisis facing the country.

Ministers have said repeatedly that Greece would not have the funds to pay the IMF unless it reached a deal with creditors to unlock 7.2 billion euros in bailout funds frozen while the two sides wrestled over the conditions demanded of Athens.

After talks broke down at the weekend, triggering the imposition of capital controls on Greek banks, it became a virtual formality that the IMF’s June 30 deadline would not be met.

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde earlier this month said Greece would be in default as of July 1 if it failed to the pay the money, though an IMF spokesman last week said a missed payment would classify Greece as “in arrears”.

The missed payment would bring Greece closer to an exit from the euro zone currency if it prompted the European Central Bank to cut off emergency funding that Greek banks rely on. But the ECB is expected to maintain that lifeline at least for this week and analysts say Greece could default and remain in the euro.

Despite the shock of a default by a euro zone country, Greece’s fate is likely to remain unchanged until after a snap referendum on July 5 on bailout terms presented by creditors in exchange for aid.

Euro zone policymakers have warned Greeks that a “no” vote against the aid package would be tantamount to a rejection of engagement with creditors and point towards a euro zone exit.

The next act: what happens now in Greece’s drama

(AP) Greece has entered the twilight zone.

Out of money, cut off by its creditors, its banks shut, the struggling country will vote Sunday on whether to accept painful cutbacks in return for desperately needed financing.
Between now and then Greece remains suspended between collapse and an uncertain rescue, between membership in the 19-member euro club and the possibility of a humiliating exit.

A look at what’s ahead:

Q: What is next deadline for Greece?

A: On Tuesday, the main part of Greece’s bailout deal expires. With no agreement to release the last 7.2 billion euros ($8.1 billion) from that deal, Greece is on its own.

An EU official said that after the deal expires, it would take weeks for creditors – other eurozone states and the International Monetary Fund – to put a new agreement on track.

Tuesday is also the day Greece has to pay a debt of about 1.5 billion euros ($1.7 billion) to the IMF. If Greece doesn’t pay, it will take a while for the IMF to actually declare Greece in default. Credit ratings agencies say arrears to the IMF will not immediately trigger a default crediting rating for Greece.

But the IMF won’t give Greece more money unless the arrears are taken care of. That puts Greece in the same bin with fragile, war-torn developing countries in Africa and Latin America.

Q: And after Tuesday?

A: Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has called a referendum for Sunday. Greeks will be asked to vote if they support a bailout deal that creditors have proposed that involves budget cutbacks and tax increases in exchange for the remaining loans in the country’s rescue program.

Tsipras is urging people to vote ”no.”

The catch, however, is that by the time of the vote, Greece’s bailout program would have expired. So it’s unclear exactly what the Greeks would vote on and how the question would be framed.

Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the EU Commission, has urged Greeks to vote ”yes” to a deal, no matter how it is worded.

A ”no” vote could mean euro exit is closer for Greece, as the country would have no outside financial aid.

Some think a ”yes” could restart talks. Joerg Kraemer, chief economist at Commerzbank, says that ”should the electorate vote in favor of a compromise, the eurozone members will not be able to ignore that and will resume negotiations.”

A ”yes” vote, however, could lead to the collapse of the Greek government, as it is unclear it would be able or willing to implement a deal with creditors that it had so vehemently resisted.

Q: Is a deal to save Greece still possible?

A: Technically, yes. Pierre Moscovici, the EU’s top economic official, said Monday that a deal was ”a few centimeters” away.

EU officials and creditors indicate their last offer is still on the table. Tsipras has vowed not to accept it.

Q: Will Greece leave the eurozone?

A: Many see Greece’s decision to close the banks as a step closer to leaving the euro.

The banks’ trouble is a bad sign, because the Greek government would need billions of euros if it has to rescue them without outside support. Until Sunday, the ECB had been keeping the banks afloat by increasing emergency credit as deposits fled.

A modern economy needs functioning banks. For Greece that would mean printing a new currency and using it to refloat the banking system.

Greece is also having serious trouble paying its day-to-day bills for salaries and pension.

If it starts issuing scrip – official IOUs for payment later – that could be the first step in introducing a new currency.

Q: If Greece leaves the euro, will the shared currency fall apart?

A: Many economists say no.

Since its troubles over high government debt started in 2009 – in Greece – the eurozone has built anti-crisis measures. Those include a pot of money to rescue troubled governments and an offer by the ECB to buy the bonds of governments facing market pressure. The ECB’s current 1.1 trillion euro bond-buying monetary stimulus program has further insulated markets from panic. The ECB says it will take additional steps if necessary to keep Greece’s troubles from spreading.

In the longer term, however, some experts think a Greek departure sets a bad precedent. Investors might think other countries could leave, and would require higher interest to lend those countries money. That would hurt the countries financially, in the longer term, and market pressure could conceivable force them out too if they run into trouble.

Q: Will a Greek exit from the euro hurt my investments, as the Lehman Brothers collapse did in 2008?

A: Stock were down globally on Monday, though there was no outright panic.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew says no one really knows what the fallout would be from Greek exit. Which is why he thinks it should be avoided.

Demetrios Efstathiou, economist with ICBC Standard Bank, says it would not be comparable to 2008.

”The collapse of Lehman Brothers came as a shock to the markets,” Demetrios Efstathiou of ICBC Standard Bank said. ”In contrast, Greece’s dire financial position has been discussed to exhaustion, for many years now, and its bonds have been trading at distressed levels for many months.”

Take your pick.

For Updates Check Economy News; follow us on Facebook and Twitter