www.xinhuanet.com
XINHUA online
CHINA VIEW
VIEW CHINA
 Breaking News 7 Iraqi National Guard soldiers killed     Subway carriages collide in Bangkok    Urgent: Israel tank fire kills two Palestinians in southern Gaza     URGENT: Exit polls show Mesic re-elected Croatian president     Urgent: Saudi militant killed in Kuwait shootout    URGENT: Chinese mainland, Taiwan agrees on non-stop charter flights     
Home  
China  
World  
Business  
Technology  
Opinion  
Culture/Edu  
Sports  
Entertainment  
Life/Health  
Travel  
Weather  
  About China
  Map
  History
  Constitution
  CPC & Other Parties
  State Organs
  Local Leadership
  White Papers
  Statistics
  Major Projects
  English Websites
  BizChina
- Conferences & Exhibitions
- Investment
- Bidding
- Enterprises
- Policy update
- Technological & Economic Development Zones
Source Manufacturers and Suppliers from China and around the world
   News Photos Voice People BizChina Feature About us   
Eurozone finance ministers reject call to ease fiscal rules
www.chinaview.cn 2005-01-18 06:30:09

    BRUSSELS, Jan. 17 (Xinhuanet) - Most of finance ministers from the12-nation Eurozone on Monday night rejected calls for a significant relaxation of the fiscal rules underpinning the euro.

    German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder proposed on his article in London-based Financial Times that budget deficits should be allowed to surpass more easily the limit of 3 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP).

    "The stability pact will work better if intervention by European institutions in the budgetary sovereignty of national parliaments is only permitted under very limited conditions," said Schroder.

    Schroder's intervention in the debate over the future of the European Union's stability and growth pact overshadowed Monday night's Eurogroup meeting of 12 single currency finance ministers in Brussels.

    Jean-Claude Juncker, the Luxembourg prime minister and president of the Eurogroup, fears that could amount to a renationalizing of fiscal policy, which is a breach of EU treaty provisions for economic co-operation in the eurozone.

    "Nobody in the Eurogroup thinks this is a good idea," said one Luxembourg official.

    Karl-Heinz Grasser, Austrian finance minister and deputy Eurogroup president, also rejected Schroder's plan, calling for greater fiscal co-operation in the euro area and a greater role for the EU executive European Commission in policing the rules.

    "A strong stability pact is a precondition of a successful euro," he said.

    EU finance ministers will continue their debate on reforming the pact at Tuesday's Ecofin Council in Brussels in an attempt to prepare a deal to present to heads of government at their economicsummit on March 22 and 23.

    They will also vote on whether to pursue action under the stability pact against Greece and Hungary over their alleged failure to control their deficits. Enditem

  Related Story
Copyright ©2003 Xinhua News Agency. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.