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Statement by Commissioner Rehn on Greece
Commissioner Rehn said that he welcomes the commitment by the Greek government to meet the agreed fiscal targets fully this year and next, and to take the necessary consolidation measures to achieve these objectives.
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Plenary session: MEPs call for unified EU response to debt crisis
MEPs emphasised the need for a unified European response to stabilise the situation. The adoption of a legislative package on economic governance would be a big step in the right direction, MEPs agreed, while warning that ordinary people cannot be expected to bear the whole cost of the crisis.
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Statement by Herman van Rompuy following his meeting with Donald Tusk, Prime Minister of Poland
Van Rompuy and Tusk had an exchange of views on the most recent economic developments in the euro area and the EU. They agreed that economic growth is moderating in Europe and other developed countries, and "we are facing headwinds".
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IMF chief urges focus on riskier EU debt
International Monetary Fund chief, Christine Lagarde, encouraged emerging market countries interested in buying European government debt to focus on nations that have trouble borrowing, not just those with strong fiscal track records.
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WSJ: Merkel, Sarkozy say Greece belongs in currency bloc
Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are convinced that Greece's future is within the eurozone, after a three-way conference call with Greek Prime Minister, George Papandreou.
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S&D Schulz leads call for united action plan for euro
S&D leader, Martin Schulz, today criticised poor management of the euro crisis and called for "a committed common set of actions with common institutions" to resolve the current crisis.
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A euro without Germany? Don’t bet against it
Times editor-at-large, Anatole Kaletsky, comments that if the Bundesbank doesn't get its way on bailouts, the impossible may become inevitable.
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Bloomberg: Geithner takes tougher tone on Europe
US Treasury Secretary, Timothy F Geithner, will urge European governments to step up their crisis-fighting efforts amid Obama administration concerns that the region's woes may hurt the US economy.
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World Bank Zoellick: Time for muddling through is over, all need to be responsible stakeholders now
Mr Zoellick said the stakeholders need to act on today's problems while building for tomorrow's challenges, and they need to solve national issues with an eye towards shaping a healthy international system.
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FT: Wen sets preconditions to help Europe
Wen Jiabao, Chinese premier, has called on debt-laden European countries to put their “own houses in order” before asking China for a bail-out, in a sign of Beijing's reluctance to be cast as a saviour for the global economy.
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Reuters: EU warned of credit crunch
European finance ministers have been warned of the danger of a renewed credit crunch as a "systemic" crisis in eurozone sovereign debt spills over to banks.
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FT: Merkel bids to quash Greece default talk
Mixed messages from members of Germany’s ruling centre-right coalition have fed recent market turmoil. But the chancellor slapped down her political partners for speculating about Greek insolvency, or even an exit by Athens from the euro.
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WSJ: Greece's efforts fail to calm
The property-tax manoeuvre is part of what has now become a ritual between Greece and the international lenders who are bailing it out: the country teeters on the brink of running out of money—Greece has only enough to last until mid-October—and then hurriedly promises fresh measures to win more.
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Bloomberg: Merkel says uncontrolled Greek insolvency must be avoided
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she won't let Greece go into “uncontrolled insolvency” because of the risk of contagion for other euro area countries.
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WSJ: Support grows for new EU Treaty to boost fiscal ties in eurozone
The push for a new European Union treaty giving the eurozone greater fiscal integration got a significant boost over the weekend after UK finance chief, George Osborne, acknowledged he had discussed the matter with his European counterparts, and said a new treaty was likely in the next two years.
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IMF completes first review under an EFF with Portugal and approves €3.98 billion disbursement
The EFF, which was approved on May 20 2011, is part of a cooperative package of financing with the European Union, amounting to €78 billion over three years.
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EC 2011 Report on Public Finances: The sustainability of the public finances is the key policy concern in the wake of the crisis
The report looks at the recent developments in public finances, analyses new ways of assessing debt sustainability, and describes the changes to budgetary surveillance. The reforms put prevention and debt reduction at the centre of EU budgetary surveillance, based on the lessons of the crisis.
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FT: Italy turns to China for help in debt crisis
Italy's government is turning to China in the hope that Beijing will help rescue it from financial crisis by making “significant” purchases of Italian bonds and investments in strategic companies.
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FN: Default swaps could boost EFSF funding efforts
The European Financial Stability Fund faces a busy autumn. It has issued three bonds this year worth €13bn in total, but more are on the way. Its borrowing capacity has increased from €250bn last year to €440bn, but it may not be enough to cope with the growing number of weak eurozone credits.
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Reuters: Stark ECB exit hits shaky eurozone at worst time
The resignation of the top German official at the European Central Bank could hardly have come at a worse time for eurozone policymakers as they grope for a way out of the deepest crisis in the single currency's 12-year history.
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FT: Germany rewrites its contract with ECB
Jürgen Stark's surprise resignation as ECB executive board member on Friday was a serious jolt to the eurozone, at a time when worries over a Greek default were already fraying financial market nerves.
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FT: Lagarde softens stance on EU banks
Christine Lagarde has softened her stance on the amount of capital needed by European banks.
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WSJ: ECB opens door to shift on rates
The European Central Bank opened the door to interest-rate cuts if needed to bolster a weakening economic recovery - a dramatic U-turn from its decision to raise interest rates just two months ago.
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OECD says economic growth perspectives weakening as recovery slows
Economic recovery appears to have come close to a halt in the major industrialised economies, with falling household and business confidence affecting both world trade and employment, according to new analysis from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
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Madrid and Rome – two sorts of crisis
The article claims that both Spain and Italy play a crucial role in the future of the single currency.
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FT: Expulsion from the eurozone has to be the final penalty
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and Dutch Minister of Finance Jan Kees de Jager say that the agreements that have been made must be anchored more firmly, and tougher action taken to enforce them.
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WSJ: Italian austerity plan clears Senate hurdle
The Italian government's austerity package was approved by the Senate on Wednesday, clearing a major hurdle in Italy's efforts to convince investors that the country is credit-worthy.
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Geithner: What the world must do to boost growth
Writing in the FT, US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner says that the question is not whether we have the economic or financial capacity to act to strengthen growth, but whether we have the political ability to do the right things.
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