Portugal's caretaker prime minister Jose Socrates has announced that he has reached agreement on a bail-out from the EU and the International Monetary Fund.
He said the three-year loan was a "good agreement that defends Portugal".His office says that Portugal will be asking for financial assistance worth 78bn euros ($116bn; £70bn).
Officials from the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF have been working on a deal for three weeks.
In a televised statement, Mr Socrates said that Portugal would be given more time to reach its budget deficit targets than had previously been expected.
The deficit will have to be cut to 5.9% of GDP this year, 4.5% in 2012 and 3% in 2013.
Portugal had previously aimed to reduce the deficit to 4.6% this year, 3% in 2012 and 2% in 2013.
Austerity measures "I would like to announce to the Portuguese people that the government has reached agreement today with the representatives of international institutions on the programme of financial aid to our country," he said.
Mr Socrates resigned as prime minister after failing to get austerity measures through parliament. There will be a general election on 5 June.
The deal has to be endorsed by the main opposition parties.The deadline for the bail-out money to be in place is 15 June, when Portugal has to repay nearly 5bn euros of debt.
Portugal was the third eurozone country to have to ask for a bail-out, after Greece and Ireland.
Its economy is expected to contract this year as a result of the latest set of austerity measures.
Unravelling rescue There are still hurdles to be overcome for Portugal's bail-out deal.
BBC business editor Robert Peston says there are fears that Greece's rescue is unravelling and that the Portuguese bail-out will not be the eurozone's last.
"Just at the time that Portugal hopes loans from the EU and IMF will be enough to tide it over, investors are increasingly of the view that a similar rescue of Greece hasn't worked and that Greece will have to write off portions of its huge government borrowings," he says.
The great fear in the eurozone is that Portugal's bigger neighbour Spain will also need bailing out, which the EU may not be able to afford.
There are also challenges to Portugal's bail-out coming from Finland, where the bail-out has become a big issue in the formation of a new coalition government, following last month's elections.
EU rules require all member states to approve, or at least not oppose, bail-outs.
Prime Minister-elect Jyrki Katainen has said he will not be able to begin official talks on forming a government until 18 May, which is too late for Finland to be able to vote at the EU finance ministers meeting in Brussels on 16 May that would have to approve the bail-out package.
Mr Katainen said he might have to ask parliament to vote on whether to endorse the deal before a government is formed, which might pose difficulties because there was much support in the elections for parties that oppose bail-outs.
source-BBC
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