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EURO

Le Pen’s plan to ditch the euro ‘would cost France €30 billion a year’

Marine Le Pen's pledge to ditch the euro if elected French president would cost the country over €30 billion a year in increased borrowing costs, the country's central bank governor warned Monday.

Le Pen's plan to ditch the euro 'would cost France €30 billion a year'
Photo: Gena96/Depositphotos" target="_blank">Depositphotos
With less than three months to go before the first round of the election Le Pen is polling strongly on a nationalist platform of heavily curtailing migration, relinquishing the euro and organising a referendum on France's EU membership.
  
Banque de France governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau said that pulling out of the single currency would drive up the cost of France's borrowing.
   
“If we were alone, we would be helpless faced with financial market speculation… and helpless faced with US pressure on the dollar,” he told France Inter radio.
   
“Financing France's public debt would cost over €30 billion ($31 billion) a year: that's the equivalent of France's annual defence budget,” he said.
   
Villeroy de Galhau did not give a breakdown of the calculation but said the interest on France's debt had fallen by 1.5 percent since it adopted the single currency.
   
“That is very significant for those with home loans, for business investments and all taxpayers,” he said.
   
He also credited the euro with keeping inflation down, causing it to fall from nearly five percent annually before the 1992 Maastricht Treaty that ushered in the euro to under two percent currently.
   
Le Pen has argued that France needs to take back control over its monetary policy to boost growth — forecast to come in at 1.3 percent in 2017, below a eurozone average of 1.7 percent — and rein in unemployment.
  
Villeroy de Galhau acknowledged that the French economy needed to be “repaired and refurbished” but rejected the notion that the euro was the cause of its malaise.
   
“Many countries that share the euro with us are doing well on the economic front,” he said, warning against “tearing down the foundations, our currency the euro, which forms a very strong basis in uncertain times.”

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FOOTBALL

‘I’m fine — under the circumstances’: Collapsed Danish striker tweets from hospital

Christian Eriksen, the Danish football player who collapsed on the pitch in his country's opening Euro 2020 game, said that he was doing "fine" in an Instagram post from hospital on Tuesday.

'I’m fine — under the circumstances': Collapsed Danish striker tweets from hospital
Danish striker Christian Eriksen tweeted a picture of himself in hospital. Photo: DBU

“I’m fine — under the circumstances, I still have to go through some examinations at the hospital, but I feel okay,” he wrote in a post accompanying a photo of him smiling and giving a thumbs-up while lying in bed.

In a scene that shocked the sporting world and beyond, the 29-year-old Inter Milan midfielder suddenly collapsed on the field in the 43rd minute of Denmark’s Group B game on Saturday against Finland in Copenhagen.

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Medical personnel administered CPR as he lay motionless on the field for about 15 minutes before being carried off the pitch and rushed to hospital. He was later confirmed to have suffered cardiac arrest.

“Big thanks for your sweet and amazing greetings and messages from all around the world. It means a lot to me and my family,” he wrote in Tuesday’s post. “Now, I will cheer on the boys on the Denmark team in the next matches. Play for all of Denmark.”

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