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POLITICAL ECONOMY
EU working 'night and day' to finesse eurozone rescue
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Aug 5, 2011

China says debt financing unlikely 'to save' US, EU
Beijing (AFP) Aug 6, 2011 - China said Friday that debt deals in the United States and in Europe would not be enough to save their economies and "concrete steps" must be taken to rebalance the global economy.

"The only way the Americans have come up with to improve economic growth has been to take on new loans to repay the old ones," a blistering commentary published on the official Xinhua news agency said.

"To eat May's grain in April, however, will never be a permanent solution to a problem," the report said.

China warned on Wednesday that Washington's efforts to raise the US limit on borrowing had failed to defuse America's "debt bomb" and signalled that Beijing would further diversify its holdings away from the dollar.

After months of bitter negotiations with his Republican rivals, US President Barack Obama finally signed an emergency bill on Tuesday that averted what would have been a disastrous debt default for the world's biggest economy.

Beijing's latest comments rounded on Thursday's 500-point drop in the Dow Jones industrial index, noting that it had exposed "the plight of western economies and their deep structural defects."

"The United States has long been maintaining economic growth and excessive consumption by means of debt financing, hence masses of economic bubbles, which eventually triggered the financial crisis," the commentary said.

The commentary also took aim at the European Union, whose members recently constructed a deal to stave off a sovereign debt crisis in Greece in fear that it would be a harbinger to a wider and deeper credit malaise in the eurozone.

"The current bailouts offered by international bodies such as the EU are in a sense, to 'rob Peter to pay Paul'," it said.

"Only by introducing reform can they save themselves; only with a sound economic structure can they assume responsibility for the world economy."

The EU said Friday it is working "night and day" to ready new debt rescue funding, jolted by record eurozone lending premiums and stocks crashing on alarm over renewed global recession.

Economic Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn rushed back to Brussels, seeking to soothe tension after contagion even began to threaten France on the bond market, also announcing he will propose new, common 'Euro-bonds' next month.

Until now taboo, these would allow eurozone governments to raise the monies they need to run their countries based on guarantees from the entire 17-country bloc of 332 million people.

Holidaying German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi launched a flurry of telephone discussions also involving EU president Herman Van Rompuy.

However, an EU official in Brussels said no emergency summit was on the cards.

Rehn said that the input of G7 and G20 partners -- bringing in the United States, Japan, Britain and powerful, big developing economies like Brazil, China, India and Russia -- will be of "critical importance" in wider efforts to resolve the spiralling chaos.

China said that debt deals in Europe and the United States, where the permitted ceiling was again raised, would not be enough to save their respective economies.

"Concrete steps" must be taken to rebalance the global economy, said a commentary published by the official Xinhua news agency.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague called a crisis meeting there, saying London would take the "necessary action" to combat the crisis engulfing its biggest trading partner.

Rehn said the small print on the new monies and powers would be ready "in weeks, not months."

The European Commission, the European Central Bank and the European Financial Stability Facility are each "working night and day to put flesh on the bones" of an agreement struck last month.

He maintained that he did not believe Spain and Italy, the two core countries most under pressure, would need a financial rescue -- even if bailout funds may eventually need increased.

Both had committed to budget cuts and reforms, for example of labour law.

The July 21 emergency summit was called over fears the Greek debt crisis could spill over to the eurozone's third- and fourth-largest economies.

Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou urged leaders Friday to nail down the details "now."

The second Greek rescue and the changes to the fund need ratification by all member nations, in some cases by national parliaments.

But Rehn said the time required was the "necessary -- and legitimate -- price to pay for living in democracies."

Hundreds of billions of dollars in value were lost this week during a global stocks sell-off sparked by prospects of a slowdown in the US economy as well as eurozone debt concerns.

US stocks again fell sharply Friday, alongside Europe's major exchanges.

A resumption of government bond purchases by the ECB had limited effect on tensions as its president Jean-Claude Trichet was coy on identifying which bonds would be bought.

Under the July deal, the second bailout for Greece in just over a year, this time with one-off participation by the private sector, is to amount to 160 billion euros ($226 billion).

Leaders also agreed to beef up the powers of the 440-billion-euro EFSF, allowing it to step in to help troubled banks and buy back debt on secondary markets.

Since then, though, European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso has said "all elements" including size need to be re-visited.

Rehn refused "to enter into the numbers game at this stage." The temporary fund will be replaced in January 2013 by a 750-billion-euro European Stability Mechanism (ESM).

rt-burs/rl




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EU leaders to meet on new eurozone woes
Brussels (UPI) Aug 5, 2011 - European leaders have called crisis talks to discuss measures to stop European stock markets tumbling further in a blow to an already badly bruised eurozone.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero scheduled conference calls to look at further emergency measures amid speculation the EU was increasingly boxed in over the eurozone debt crisis.

Dealers speculated the market falls were at least partly in response to conflicting signals from Europe that the eurozone debt crisis could be spinning out of control.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso sent alarm bells ringing after he voiced fears Thursday the eurozone crisis might be spilling out of the so-called eurozone periphery -- Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

Market analysts immediately saw the comment as a reference to Italy and Spain, already top of the eurozone danger list.

Other European officials deplored Barroso's comments as ill-timed, with the Germans reported to be livid over what they saw as unwarranted words reversing the gains made after the July 21 summit.

Participants at that meeting agreed on a second bailout for Greece and greater flexibility for the European Financial Stability Facility, a rescue fund set at around $625 billion but already seen as inadequate.

Barroso also called for increasing the rescue fund to deal with a crisis from the eurozone contagion reaching other member countries. But that comment too didn't go down very well, as resistance to the existing level of the bailout reserve fund is already palpably strong and more cash needs are hard to predict amid emerging risks of multiple crises hitting the eurozone.

Eurozone traders also gave a lukewarm welcome to the European Central Bank's much-trumpeted bond rescue moves Thursday. ECB bought Irish and Portuguese government bonds but skipped the Italian and Spanish debt, sending an apparently unintended signal to traders the two countries' bonds weren't as attractive.

ECB President Jean Claude Trichet called the move "a supplementary refinancing operation" in response to "renewed tensions in some financial markets."

Some European officials insist the current downturn is mostly a response to poor prospects for growth in the United States and the fact that the U.S. borrowing limit deal has turned the markets' attention back to the eurozone, where problems persist and seem to be multiplying despite the July deal over Greece.

British regulator Bank of England, meanwhile, left its main interest rate at a record low 0.50 percent Thursday for the 29th month amid a weak economic growth outlook for Britain and market turmoil worldwide.

Britain's economy is struggling to absorb deep budget cuts and the latest data indicated that it slowed to a trickle -- 0.2 percent -- in the second quarter this year. This was after the index was partly affected by the April 29 wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton.

The British central bank seems in no mood to inject more cash for fear of exacerbating the annual inflation rate, at 4.2 percent already more than double the target of 2 percent set by the central bank.

But economists say the unfolding crisis in the markets may force the hand of Bank of England, too.





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