PARIS, Oct. 12 (Xinhua) -- Leaders from the eurozone countries hammered out an action plan in a joint response to the unfolding financial crisis at their first ever summit in Paris on Sunday.
The financial crisis "needs concrete measures and unity. That is what
we have today," French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who hosted the emergency
summit with his counterparts from the other 14 eurozone members, said at a press
conference.
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(From L) Belgium's Prime Minister Yves
Leterme, Austria's Federal Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer, Germany's Federal
chancellor Angela Merkel, France's President and current European Union
president Nicolas Sarkozy, French Prime Minister Francois Fillon, European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, Luxembourg's Prime Minister
Jean-Claude Juncker and European Central Bank President Jean-Claude
Trichet pose for a family picture ahead of a financial crisis summit
gathering Eurogroup heads of state and government at the Elysee Palace in
Paris on October 12, 2008. The summit aims to define a joint action plan
for the eurozone and the European Central Bank in relation to the current
financial crisis. (Xinhua Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
In a joint declaration after the summit, eurozone leaders pledged to
"act together in a decisive and comprehensive way in order to restore confidence
and proper functioning of the financial system, aiming at restoring appropriate
and efficient financing conditions for the economy."
Among those agreed measures, Sarkozy said governments, acting on
national basis, would buy into banks to boost their finances and temporarily
guarantee bank refinancing to ease the credit crunch.
Eurozone leaders said each member state would supply additional
capital to financial institutions by acquiring preferred shares or other
instruments including non-dilutive ones so as to allow financial institutions to
continue to ensure the proper financing of the eurozone economy.
However, financial institutions have to accept additional
restrictions, they warned.
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Austria's Federal Chancellor Alfred
Gusenbauer (L) and Luxembourg's Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker shake
hands ahead of a financial crisis summit gathering Eurogroup heads of
state and government at the Elysee Palace in Paris on October 12, 2008.
The summit aims to define a joint action plan for the eurozone and the
European Central Bank in relation to the current financial crisis. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
This measure mirrored a British bailout plan unveiled last week.
The British government announced on Oct. 8 a massive plan which would
inject 50 billion pounds (87 billion U.S. dollars) into its banks through the
purchase of preferred shares.
Ahead of the eurozone summit, Sarkozy received British Prime Minister
Gordon Brown at his presidential residence at the Elysee Palace on a possible
copy of the British model.
Britain is a member of the European Union (EU) but stays out of the
euro zone.
In a bid to relieve funding problems of liquidity constrained solvent
banks, eurozone leaders said the governments would guarantee "for an interim
period and on appropriate commercial terms" new debt issued by banks for up to
five years.
"This scheme would be limited in amount and will be applied under
close scrutiny of financial authorities until Dec. 31, 2009," it said.
The guarantee will be provided on normal market conditions and all
financial institutions in the eurozone countries will be eligible, but
governments may impose further conditions for the beneficiaries of these
arrangements.
Sarkozy warned the measure taken by the leaders was "not a gift to
banks."
"Banks need to be loaned money," he said. "So that this confidence is
restored, states will have the possibility to guarantee the loans that banks
take out, guarantee them under different forms."
Eurozone leaders are also committed to an efficient recapitalization
of distressed banks so as to avoid the failure of relevant financial
institutions.
Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs the euro
group, described the action plan as a toolbox, in which each member state can
choose its own instrument.
But the declaration failed to give any indication of the possible
scale of national rescue plans.
In line with the action plan, France, Germany, Italy, Austria and
other countries will unveil their bailout plans on Monday, with the German one
expected to be worth around 400 billion euros (549 billion dollars).
Analysts said the next 24 hours could be crucial for European markets
to achieve a turning point after heavy losses last week.
It is the first time that eurozone leaders hold a separate meeting
without their counterparts from other EU members. The summit came after the
European markets underwent a rarely turbulent week despite furious efforts by
individual countries to contain the financial crisis and only three days away
from a regular EU summit starting in Brussels on Wednesday.
Sarkozy said eurozone leaders would
present the action plan to the broader summit in order to maximize coordination
among European countries.
Eurozone leaders hold emergency summit
on financial crisis
PARIS, Oct. 12 (Xinhua) -- Leaders from the eurozone
countries met in Paris on Sunday for their first ever summit in an urgent bid to
seek a joint response to the spreading financial crisis.
"This meeting's purpose is to draw up a joint action plan
for the euro area member states and the European Central Bank (ECB) in response
to the current financial crisis," the French government, which holds the
European Union (EU) rotating presidency, said in a statement. Full story
News Analysis: Eurozone leaders to
meet on joint response to financial crisis
PARIS, Oct. 12 (Xinhua) -- Leaders from the eurozone
countries will meet in Paris for their first ever summit later Sunday in another
attempt to find a joint response to the financial crisis which is devastating
Europe.
"This meeting's purpose is to draw up a joint action plan
for the euro area member states and the European Central Bank (ECB) in response
to the current financial crisis," the French government, which holds the
European Union (EU) rotating presidency, said on its website. Full story