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Dublin: 9 °C Wednesday 22 May, 2013

Four biggest Eurozone countries to push for €130 billion stimulus

France, Germany, Italy and Spain agree to lobby for a €130 billion growth plan at next week’s summit in Brussels.

Mario Monti (r) hosted Angela Merkel (l), Francois Hollande and Mariano Rajoy for four-day talks in Rome this afternoon.
Mario Monti (r) hosted Angela Merkel (l), Francois Hollande and Mariano Rajoy for four-day talks in Rome this afternoon.
Image: Andrew Medichini/AP

THE HEADS of government of the eurozone’s four largest countries have agreed to lobby for a €130 billion economic stimulus plan at next week’s summit of EU leaders, in an effort to kickstart the European economy.

French president Francois Hollande, Germany’s chancellor Angela Merkel, and Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy agreed to the deal at a meeting hosted by Italian premier Mario Monti in Rome today.

Monti told a news conference after the four-way summit that the four all recognised that steps taken so far have not been sufficient.

He said both markets and EU citizens need to view the euro as “irreversible”, something he implied was not the case at present. “The euro is here to stay, and we all mean it,” he said.

A plan to “relaunch growth” was the “first objective” in tackling the currency crisis, Monti added.

Hollande added that the leaders had agreed on the need for a financial transaction tax, though a meeting of the EU’s 27 finance ministers in Luxembourg – attended by Michael Noonan – ended with no firm agreement on the introduction of an EU-wide transaction tax.

Noonan said that while nine countries had agreed to such a tax, Ireland would not adopt such a measure unless the UK was also doing so – as levying such a tax in Dublin, but not in London, could see businesses leave the IFSC in favour of London instead.

Additional reporting by AP and AFP

Read: Noonan to continue promissory note campaign at Eurozone ministers’ meeting

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Comments (15 Comments)

  • Why only 4?
    I thought the Lisbon treaty was all about every country having an equal voice…”a bigger voice”….”at the heart of Europe”…….(surely we were’nt lied to?)

    Reply
  • I am no economist except on the home front and it would seem that austerity is certainly not working, too many governments are too deep in debt, so maybe the opposite might kick start a few economies and increase employment, taxation, spending etc.
    What is the choice, more of the same that is not working at all?

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  • Oh Mario, that’s where you’re wrong. The euro is reversible and will, in time, be reversed. It’s success relies on a fiscal union, one which the citizens of each country will be required to agree with, and that simply won’t happen.

    Buy into Germans desperation to keep the euro, since it benefits then enormously, if you want but as Dougal had to be reminded, dreams and reality and two very different things.

    This is coming from someone who is absolutely pro-our government and pro-Eu too, but they’ve another thing coming if they think we can’t walk away from this if we want to.

    Reply
    • No Wolfgang, what is needed is a central bank to act as lender of last resort like anywhere else in the real world. ECB Bond buying is needed to lower Ireland’s borrowing costs. The Germans don’t like rationality because they have an irrational fear of “hyperinflation”. Bond purchases can be sterilized to eliminate the inflationary effect.

      Reply
  • About time

    Reply
  • How can people not see a correlation between Enda Kenny and Brian Cowen?

    LOL

    In the words of Gordon Gecko Kenny “doesn’t know the difference between prime stock and livestock”

    We gotta get Kenny voted out.

    Reply
  • We do have a problem with over indebtedness so printing lots of money will help. It will stoke inflation (although nobody will say the word, because it’s against the remit of the ECB and anathema to the Germans) so our Euro-denominated mortgages will be worth less, as will the €75.000 a year we pay our mid-ranking civil servants. Whether that will kickstart the economy is another matter.

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    • They need to start printing money. The ECB’s mandate is incredibly rigid and non-applicable to the 21st century. House prices being down 68% here requires a central bank to monetize big time.

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  • Another shot in the dark hoping to buy some more time! Anything rather than deal with the real issue! Austerity and growth don’t go! The debt problem has to be addressed, and if that means some big shots take a bit of pain, then so be it!

    Reply
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      Reply

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