Economy & Finance

Germany’s Schaeuble, Merkel push for crisis cure on summit eve

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MUNICH, Germany (Reuters) – German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on the eve of a summit of European leaders that debt-ridden euro zone states must help themselves while Chancellor Angela Merkel said Europe needed to resolve its crisis to become competitive once again.

Over two days starting on Thursday, EU leaders meeting in Brussels are expected to deal with the issues of banking supervision, the single market, a centralized euro zone budget, a single bank resolution fund, direct recapitalization of banks from rescue funds and stricter fiscal oversight.

“Countries need to tackle problems themselves,” Schaeuble said. “We need to make sure that they have the necessary time in financial markets and we’re doing that.”

Greece, whose debt woes triggered the euro zone crisis, is in its fifth year of recession and has struggled to meet fiscal targets set by the “troika” of international lenders. But on Wednesday it agreed with its lenders on most austerity cuts and reforms needed to unlock fresh aid.

Schaeuble stressed that problems needed to be solved in euro zone member states since that was where they had arisen, adding that the euro zone bailout fund was there to help countries help themselves. He reiterated his view that further steps towards political integration would strengthen the bloc.

On Tuesday, Schaeuble had called for a leap forward in European integration, saying the bloc needs a commissioner with power over member nations’ budgets and reform of European Parliament decision-making.

He said on Wednesday that his plans for a “currency commissioner” did not threaten democracy and added that budget rules in Europe needed to be kept. Parliaments in each country needed to stick to deficit limits and decide how they would achieve this in their budgets, he said.

Meanwhile, Merkel said Europe’s main tasks were to regain credibility and become competitive again.

At a meeting of European center-right parties in Bucharest, she acknowledged the achievements of Greece, Portugal and several eastern European states in implementing reforms and said: “It is particularly important to stick together at this time and to support each other.”

“True friendship only proves its worth when there’s a crisis and the going gets tough,” she said, adding that Germany wanted a successful Europe and would fight for this.

($1 = 0.7621 euros)

(Reporting by Irene Preisinger and Andreas Rinke- Writing by Michelle Martin- Editing by Michael Roddy)

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