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Dublin: 9 °C Tuesday 21 May, 2013

Germany rejects notion that Europe’s bailout fund could buy Spanish debt

Despite promises, no green light has been given to any specific action.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, right, gestures as he speaks to German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, right, gestures as he speaks to German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Image: Gero Breloer/AP/Press Association Images

GERMANY’S FINANCE MINISTER is rejecting talk of a possible application from Spain for the eurozone’s bailout fund to buy the struggling country’s bonds, a newspaper reported today.

This week, European Central Bank head Mario Draghi promised to do “whatever it takes” to preserve the euro and German and French leaders said that they were “determined to do everything to protect the eurozone.”

Although neither mentioned any specific action, the comments raised expectations that the ECB – or the eurozone’s temporary rescue fund, the European Financial Stability Facility – might step in to buy Spanish government bonds and lower the country’s borrowing costs, which have been at worryingly high levels in recent weeks.

Still, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble was quoted as telling the Welt am Sonntag newspaper that Spain’s short-term financing needs are “not so big”.

Asked about talk that Spain could soon make an application for the eurozone rescue fund to buy bonds, he replied: “There is nothing to this speculation.”

The high interest rates are painful and they create a lot of concern – but it’s not the end of the world if one has to pay a few percent more at a few bond auctions.

He added that an aid package worth up to €100 billion to help Spain’s banks, which are laden with soured investments following a property sector collapse, is large enough. Spain’s budget-cutting and economic reform efforts will have positive effects on the financial markets, he insisted.

Spanish officials have been adamant that the country, the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy, will not seek a full-scale bailout along the lines of those given to Portugal and Ireland as it battles with a persistent recession.

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Comments (10 Comments)

  • What confuses me most is when they come out saying “we’ll do anything and everything to save the Euro”, and when a possible course of action is put forward it’s a case of “that’s total speculation” or “Germany won’t allow that”. Which one is it, do they want to save the Euro or don’t they?

    Reply
    • I reckon they won’t yell us anything specific as they don’t know themselves what to do or whether they even want to save the currency or not at this stage

      Reply
    • Karswell 28/07/12 #

      It makes a lot more sense if you stop looking at Germany and the EU as some time of monolithic group mind. It’s not a case of “they” say yes but then “they” say no. One person says yes and a different person says no. Different people have different agenda and different opinions. They’re not obliged to toe the party line, as there is no party.

      Reply
  • Rob 28/07/12 #

    The ECB printing press has hardly been used so far. Time to reactivate it to lower Ireland’s high cost of borrowing.

    Reply
    • Bloody hell. You don’t really understand how devaluation works, do you? You cannot print money and expect the worth of that money to remain at it’s previous value. Printing more Euro reduces the value of the currency unit for everyone in the Eurozone, so there is no benefit in devaluation within the EZ, there’s only a benefit for EZ countries when dealing with non-EZ countries. and remind me, who do we owe money to and in what currency is that debt. If and when the Euro will be devalued, it won’t be devalued because it would be a help to Ireland.

      Reply
    • Karerll, bloody hell, actually we do understand. When you print more money and devalue a currency, country’s in dept effectively owe less and wealthy country’s are less wealthy. That I why Germany is so against it. If germany did not have the euro their own currency would have such a high value that they would not be able to export, time to start printing, the cant have it every way!

      Reply
  • I think Wolfgang is tell her , your head is in the clouds

    Reply
  • Dave 29/07/12 #

    I wish they would just cut the theatre. We all know they’ll “save” it at the end of the day, they just want to extract every concession they can from various parties and use the crisis to push certain agendas.

    I’m quite frankly bored of it already. I dont even get annoyed at this stage.

    Reply
  • Germans are playing to the galleries back home. They have elections coming up but essentially what Draghi said is probably true in that weather it be the ECB on its own or with the ‘blessing’ of Frankfurt, they’ll start buying bonds again. Allbeit kicking and screaming, ultimately Germany will come around to debt mutualisation in the EU because it simply cannot afford not to.

    Reply

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