EU urges Greece to stay in euro
European Union leaders, advised by senior officials to prepare
contingency plans in case Greece decides to quit the single currency, urged the
country to stay the course on austerity and complete the reforms demanded under
its bailout programme.After nearly six hours of talks held during an informal
dinner, leaders said they were committed to Greece remaining in the euro zone,
but it had to stick to its side of the bargain too, a commitment that will mean
a heavy cost for Greeks."We want Greece to stay in the euro, but we insist
that Greece sticks to commitments that it has agreed to," German
Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters after a Wednesday evening summit in
Brussels dragged long into the night.Three officials told Reuters the
instruction to have plans in place for a Greek exit was agreed on Monday during
a teleconference of the Eurogroup Working Group (EWG) - experts who work for
euro zone finance ministers.The Greek finance ministry denied there was any
such agreement but Belgian Finance Minister Steven Vanackere, said: "All
the contingency plans (for Greece) come back to the same thing: to be
responsible as a government is to foresee even what you hope to avoid."Two
other senior EU officials confirmed the call and its contents, saying
contingency planning was only sensible.In its monthly report, Germany's
Bundesbank said the situation in Greece was "extremely worrying" and
it was jeopardising any further financial aid by threatening not to implement
reforms agreed as part of its two bailouts.It said a euro exit would pose
"considerable but manageable" challenges for its European partners,
raising pressure on Athens to stick with its painful economic reforms.Greek
officials have said that without outside funds, the country will run out of
money within two months and there remains the threat that if it crashes out of
the euro zone, other member states could be brought down too.A document seen by
Reuters detailed the potential costs to individual member states of a Greek exit
and said that if it came about, an "amiable divorce" should be sought
with the EU and IMF possibly giving up to 50 billion euros to ease its
path.Although EU leaders' minds will have been focused by that prospect,
disagreements have flared over a plan for mutual euro zone bond issuance and
other measures to alleviate two years of debt turmoil, such as giving countries
like Spain an extra year to make the spending cuts demanded of them."The
idea is to put energy into the growth motor. All the member countries don't
necessarily share my ideas. But a certain number expressed themselves in the
same direction," new French President Francois Hollande told reporters.For
the first time in more than two years of crisis summits, the leaders of France
and Germany did not huddle beforehand to agree positions, marking a significant
shift in the axis which has traditionally driven European policymaking.Instead,
Hollande met Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy in Paris to discuss policy,
before the pair travelled to Brussels by train.Despite fears Greeks could open
the departure door if they vote for anti-bailout parties at a June 17 election,
Spain, where the economy is in recession and the banking system in need of
restructuring, is at the front line of the crisis.After meeting Hollande, Rajoy
said he had no intention of seeking outside aid for Spain's banks, which are
laden with bad debts from a property boom that bust and still has some way to
go before it touches bottom.But his government said its rescue of problem lender
Bankia would cost at least 9 billion euros and it is also seeking ways to help
its highly indebted regions meet huge refinancing bills.Shifting sands Socialist Hollande's election victory has
significantly changed the terms of the debate in Europe, with his call for
greater emphasis on growth rather than debt-cutting now a rallying cry for
other leaders.That has set up a showdown with conservative Merkel, whose
primary objective is budget austerity and structural reform.At his first EU
summit, Hollande chose to make a stand on euro bonds - issuing common euro zone
debt - despite consistent German opposition to the idea. "I was not alone
in defending euro bonds," he said.Merkel showed no sign of dropping her
objections to the proposal, which she has said can only be discussed once there
is much closer fiscal union in Europe. "There were differences in the exchange about euro bonds,"
she said bluntly.The Netherlands, Finland and some smaller euro zone member
states support her.No major decisions were made at Wednesday's summit, which
was intended to promote ideas on jobs and growth ahead of another meeting at
the end of June.But debate was intense, not just over euro bonds but over how
to rescue banks and whether to give more time to struggling euro zone countries
to meet their budget deficit goals."We haven't come together to confront
each other ... but we have to say what we think - what are the right
instruments, the right methods, the right steps, the right initiatives to raise
growth," Hollande said.The leaders discussed broad measures to stem the
fallout from a winding up or restructuring of bad banks, EU officials said,
with the European Central Bank pressing for the bloc to stand behind its
struggling lenders but with Merkel's approval seen as far from guaranteed.At
the heart of the discussion are proposals from the European Commission for a
legal framework to wind up or reorganise insolvent banks so as to avoid a
repeat of the multi-trillion-euro taxpayer bailouts during the financial
crisis.Another suggestion is for the euro zone's rescue funds to be allowed to
recapitalise banks directly, rather than having to lend to countries for
on-lending to the banks. But that is another idea with which Germany is uncomfortable.Having rallied on Tuesday, European stocks dropped 2.2
percent as investors priced in a lack of dramatic policy action. The euro
tumbled against the dollar to its lowest since August 2010 and Spanish and
Italian borrowing costs climbed.A German two-year debt auction gave a stark
illustration of how money is dashing for safe havens. Investors snapped up the
4.5 billion euros of paper on offer even though it came with a zero coupon -
offering no return at all.Search for
growth With the euro zone registering no growth in the first quarter and
threatening to slip back into recession, policymakers touted three ideas to
provide stimulus:- 'Project bonds' backed by the EU budget to finance
infrastructure projects alongside private sector investment.- Doubling the
paid-in capital of the European Investment Bank, the EU's co-financing arm, to
a little over 20 billion euros.- Redirecting structural funds which tend to
flow to poorer countries, to other areas where they might reap more immediate
growth rewards.Even if all three proposals were to be activated quickly,
economists say they will not provide a sufficient shot in the arm to the euro
zone and the wider EU economy.
No comments:
Post a Comment