Germany's Chancellor
Angela Merkel says she is satisfied with a deal to help finance debt-laden
eurozone countries : "I think we found a good compromise," she
said after all-night talks which saw her come under heavy pressure from Italy
and Spain. A new supervisory body will enable the European Central Bank (ECB)
to "keep a very close eye on the banks", she said. Spain is awaiting a
100bn-euro (£80bn; $125bn) recapitalisation of its troubled banks by the
eurozone. Mrs Merkel said the
deal on lending would provide sufficient safeguards for the taxpayers' money
used by the EU bailout funds. The German Bundestag, the lower house of
parliament, later approved the deal by a huge margin, with 491 votes for and 111
against. The upper house is expected to follow suit. The EU's existing bailout
fund - the European Financial Stability Facility - will provide aid under the
current rules until the new permanent fund, the European Stability Mechanism
(ESM), is ready to take over. The ESM is due to be launched next month. The
funds will not only be able to lend directly to banks. They will also be used to
buy bonds of countries like Italy and Spain whose borrowing costs have soared -
with the intention that those countries will not have to apply for a formal
Greek-style bailout. Eurozone leaders agreed to begin implementing the decisions
by 9 July. However, it could take until the end of the year before the new money
becomes available.
duminică, 1 iulie 2012
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