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The provision, included in a report distributed to EU countries before this month’s summit, would require all 17 eurozone members to sign on to the kinds of Brussels-approved policy programmes and timelines now negotiated only with bailout countries. If adopted, the plan could help to meet demands in Germany for tighter control over the economies of highly indebted countries such as Italy and France that have a mixed record on economic reform.
The draft is the first salvo in an anticipated fight over how to give the eurozone powers now reserved for national finance ministries. Coupled with an impending plan from José Manuel Barroso, the European Commission president, for treaty changes, it threatens a new round of debate over how much sovereignty national governments would cede to a supranational institution.
Among the more ambitious proposals included in the document... is the creation of a central eurozone budget. This, officials said, could be used to help struggling countries in times of economic crisis. The document is also likely to revive the debate on a “two-speed Europe”, with the 17 members of the eurozone headed towards closer economic coordination while the 10 non-euro “outs” struggle to find their role in the new union.
Officials involved in the drafting cautioned that the recommendations were aimed at stimulating discussion among the bloc’s leaders. Each proposal is mentioned as a measure to be “explored”. But Mr Van Rompuy’s draft comes after he has spent much of the past month travelling to eurozone capitals to solicit national leaders’ ideas on a way forward, meaning that the draft probably includes measures supported by several of them.
The draft tries to maintain a fast pace for a eurozone banking union, urging legislators to “accelerate work” on establishing a single banking supervisor “as a matter of priority by the end of the year” – a direct rebuke to Berlin, which has attempted to slow the process.
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