Tuesday, 10 February 2009

Concern is mounting over the dramatic deterioration of public finances across the EU.

Europe ambushes Germany on debt bail-out
The European Union has called an emergency summit of national leaders this month to halt the drift towards protectionism and stem the risks of a debt crisis as the slump deepens.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 6:24PM GMT 09 Feb 2009

EU finance ministers are to discuss proposals over breakfast in Brussels today for some form of "debt-agency" or mechanism for the EU to raise bonds, a move seen by diplomats as a ploy to ambush Germany into accepting shared responsibility for EU debts – anathema to Berlin.

Concern is mounting over the dramatic deterioration of public finances across the EU. Ireland's deficit is heading for 12pc of GDP, and there are doubts over whether Italy and Greece can roll over some €250bn (£218bn) in state debt between them this year.

EU company debt is a worry too, now 95pc of GDP compared to 50pc in the US. "The amount of debt to roll over in the eurozone is huge, at a time when banks are tightening credit standards," said Gilles Moec, from Bank of America. "Spanish businesses are in a dire situation."

Mirek Topolanek, Czech premier and holder of the EU presidency, said the crisis summit was aimed at thrashing out a joint "recovery plan" and curbing the nationalist reflexes that are tearing the EU apart.

The Czechs are livid over comments by French president Nicolas Sarkozy, who threatened to withold aide for French car companies unless they spend it at home. " If we give money to the auto industry to restructure, we don't want to hear about plant moving to the Czech Republic," he said.

Mr Topolanek said the comments were "unbelievable" and could cause the Czech Republic to reject the Lisbon Treaty. "If somebody wanted to seriously threaten ratification, they couldn't have picked a better means," he said.

The French plan fleshed out yesterday offers €6.5bn in soft loans to Renault and PSA Peugeot Citroen on condition that they promise not to close any sites in France. The Brussels competition police said they will examine the details to determine whether the terms breach EU law.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/globalbusiness/4571850/Europe-ambushes-Germany-on-debt-bail-out.html

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