BLBG:Euro Crisis Resolution Sought By Franco-German Leaders
German and French leaders meet this week to map out a revised plan for the euro as the Group of Eight exposed disagreement on a rescue strategy, Greece lurched toward a possible exit and Spainâs budget deficit widened.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble will for the first time discuss the 17-nation currency at a meeting with his newly installed French counterpart, Pierre Moscovici, in Berlin today as European Union leaders prepare for a summit meeting in Brussels on May 23. After three shorter meetings in the last week, Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande will seek to balance Franceâs desire to jump-start growth with Germanyâs preference for spending cuts.
âWeâre all very pleased that France wants to offer new initiatives with its newly elected president,â Schaeuble told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper in an interview yesterday. âThe German government is ready to talk about anything,â Schaeuble said, though he ruled out measures that would raise debt.
G-8 leaders on May 19 urged Greece to stay within the euro area as polls in the country showed a close race between parties supporting and opposing the EUâs bailout deal. With the country preparing for a second ballot on June 17, renewed concerns about the currency area were fanned last week as Spain revised its 2011 deficit upward -- even as its borrowing costs approached levels that prompted bailouts in Greece, Ireland and Portugal.
Two More Years
The euro has lost 3.5 percent against the U.S. dollar this month and almost $4 trillion has been wiped from equity markets amid concerns over Greece. Schaeuble said May 18 the turmoil could last another two years. Yields on Spanish 10-year bonds climbed to close at 6.27 percent last week.
President Barack Obama joined G-8 leaders including Hollande and Britainâs Prime Minister David Cameron in embracing a renewed focus on growth, underlining the isolation of Germanyâs Merkel, who maintained resistance to new spending. At the presidentâs Camp David retreat in Maryland, G-8 leaders said in their final statement that âthe right measures are not the same for each of us.â
As EU leaders prepare for their informal dinner, French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault told Liberation that no potential solutions involving Greece should be rejected. Leaders shouldnât rule out measures such as state borrowing from the European Central Bank, he said.
Greek Polls
Two weeks after elections in Greece yielded political deadlock and forced the once-taboo notion of leaving the monetary union into political discussion, euro leaders grappled with the possible fallout of such a scenario. Caretaker Prime Minister Panagiotis Pikrammenos will oversee a government that will prepare for a new election.
Opinion polls over the weekend gave a split message on the outcome, with two pointing to victory for New Democracy, which backs the international bailout program, and two favoring Syriza, which opposes it.
Syriza party leader Alexis Tsipras said yesterday in a speech in Athens that his factionâs opposition to the terms of Greeceâs financial-aid program doesnât mean the country would have to abandon the euro if the party forms a government.
Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who heads a group of European finance ministers, said a majority of his peers have doubts about Greeceâs membership of the euro, Der Spiegel reported, without saying where it got the information.
Tsipras, who travels to Paris and Berlin beginning today, denounced such talk, saying it would involve âhuge costs.â
âClear Messageâ
âWe now have to send a very clear message to people in Greece,â Cameron said yesterday as he attended a NATO summit in Chicago. âYou can either vote to stay in the euro, with all the commitments youâve made, or, if you vote another way, youâre effectively voting to leave.â
The sensitivities surrounding an exit were illustrated May 19, when Merkelâs office dismissed a claim by the Greek government that the chancellor had called for a referendum to decide on the countryâs membership in the monetary union.
Greek party leaders united in condemning any interference by the German chancellor on such an issue, with New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras, who heads the largest party, calling her reported comments âunfortunate.â
In Spain, the growth-versus-austerity debate took on a new dimension with the countryâs revision of its 2011 deficit, undermining Prime Minister Mariano Rajoyâs battle to stave off a bailout and maintain access to capital markets.
âSerious Riskâ
Rajoy, who on May 16 asked for EU help to access capital markets even as he said the country faced a âserious riskâ of being shut out, is struggling to convince investors he can cut the deficit during a recession while shielding public finances from banksâ real-estate losses.
The deficit amounted to 8.9 percent last year, 0.4 percentage point more than previously estimated, Spainâs Budget Ministry announced at 10 p.m. local time Friday. Thatâs down from 9.3 percent in 2010, following government austerity measures including cuts to public workersâ wages, a freeze on pensions and a tax increase.
Spanish Economy Minister Luis de Guindos rejected EU pressure this week to take an International Monetary Fund credit line to help shore up the nationâs lenders, the Madrid-based ABC newspaper reported. A ministry spokesman in Madrid declined to comment on the report in ABC, which cited people present at a meeting of EU finance ministers.
To contact the reporter on this story: Patrick Donahue in Berlin at pdonahue1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net