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28 March 2024

EU urges world to aid eurozone via IMF bailout

Published
By AFP

Europe urged G20 nations and other big contributors around the world Monday to come to the aid of eurozone bailout efforts through the IMF, after British resistance saw finance ministers miss a self-imposed EU target.

Eurozone chief Jean-Claude Juncker said after a three-and-a-half-hour conference call that the 17 single-currency countries had pledged 150 billion euros (ê195 billion) in new loans for the International Monetary Fund to use in stabilising the debt-laden euro area.

The shortfall from a 200-billion-euro target set on December 9 was in large part caused by Britain's refusal once more to agree to the terms demanded.

Britain's share, based on IMF quotas determined by wealth and size, would be about 30 billion euros.

The IMF currently has some 250 billion euros available for lending to countries that enter reform programmes.

"The EU would welcome G20 members and other financially strong IMF members to support the efforts to safeguard global financial stability by contributing to the increase in IMF resources so as to fill global financing gaps," Juncker said in a statement.

He said the Czech Republic, Denmark, Poland and Sweden had each pledged to make loans, but added that Britain would only "define its contribution early in the new year in the framework of the G20."

A British government spokesman said: "The UK has always been willing to consider further resources for the IMF, but for its global role and as part of a global agreement."

A diplomat involved in the talks said the 27-nation European Union as a whole "implicitly" agreed to cough up, using individual loans.

The IMF, meanwhile, welcomed the proposed new contributions.

"We welcome the EU finance ministers' support for a substantial increase in the IMF's resources, as we work to strengthen our capacity to fulfill our systemic responsibilities to our global membership."

A key factor will be how the United States responds to pressure to chip in, as the biggest single IMF member economy and a major trading partner of the eurozone. Washington however has its own debt and budget crises to contend with.

Juncker, who spoke of a "special responsibility" for eurozone states, noted that for some countries, notably Germany, parliamentary approval will be required before it will come up with the lion's share at 45 billion euros.

The head of the German central bank said last week that it will only do so on condition the very biggest Group of 20 contributors come through with the goods.

Jens Weidmann said that Germany's quota is available, provided there is "fair" burden-sharing among IMF members.

But "if large members, for example the US, were to say 'we're not taking part,' then from our point of view it is problematic," he said.

Russia last week suggested that it could contribute up to ê20 billion in loans and investments via the IMF. But China, India and Brazil have yet to go that far.

Finance ministers knew international credit rating agencies were watching closely -- after one of the biggest, Fitch, warned that a meaningful solution may prove "beyond reach" of the EU.

The diplomatic source told AFP that the British government could not sell more money for the eurozone now to increasingly sceptical voters.

Finance minister George Osborne has maintained his position that London will not fund special eurozone aid, since a G20 summit in Cannes in early November.

The latest sign London is out of synch with broader EU goals came 10 days after Prime Minister David Cameron vetoed an EU treaty change and opted out of a pact to create a new "fiscal union."

The EU leaders decided to give the IMF the lead following months struggling to increase their existing, stretched eurozone bailout fund, the 440-billion-euro European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) set up last year after Greece had to be rescued.

The agreement should offer some respite on the day that European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi described as "morbid speculation" interpretations of an interview in the Financial Times in which he appeared to envisage a eurozone break-up.

In the interview, he said that if countries left the eurozone, they would only "have to undertake the same reforms that were due to begin with, but in a much weaker position."

That was seen as breaching the ultimate taboo, but he insisted: "I have no doubts whatsoever about the strength, the permanence and the irreversibility of the euro."