SHARE
COPY LINK

EUROZONE

France and Germany pledge Eurozone reform plan by June

Germany and France on Saturday pledged to deliver a joint proposal to reform the eurozone in time for a leaders summit in June, despite their big differences on the future of the bloc.

France and Germany pledge Eurozone reform plan by June
rench Minister for the Economy and Finance Bruno Le Maire (L) and German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz (R) give a joint press conference after an informal meeting of economic and financial affairs mini
“We strongly believe that we should be able to find a compromise between France and Germany for the next council of June,” French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said at a joint press conference with his German counterpart Olaf Scholz. 
   
“It is absolutely important that France and Germany agree on questions,” said Scholz as he confirmed the joint plan for reforms despite widespread talk that divisions between the EU powerhouses were too great. 
   
Le Maire “will visit me in Berlin and this will be a very hard working meeting,” the former mayor of Hamburg said after talks in the Bulgarian capital.
   
He added: “If you look at the schedule you see that (the meeting) is desperately needed to get this success in the end.”
   
Under the impetus of French President Emmanuel Macron, EU leaders have pledged to table a set of reforms at the summit in June that France says are necessary to reboot Europe after the setbacks of Brexit.
   
The renewed promise of a Franco-German plan comes despite resistance by Germany to follow through on Macron's ideas amid resistance by political allies of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
   
Eurozone finance ministers have for months discussed the proposals, but discussions have gone nowhere.
   
Macron's grand ambitions for the single currency bloc have already been significantly watered down, with ideas for the creation of a eurozone finance minister or joint borrowing by member states dropped.
   
Instead officials are mainly focused on deepening the bloc's banking union, with hopes to formally launch a European-wide deposit-insurance scheme that would be implemented over the long-term.
   
Negotiators are also trying to draw up a plan for an EU rainy day fund as well as aid to help countries adopt economic reforms.
   
“The truth is, we are starting to run out of time,” European Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis said on Saturday, urging for compromise.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

BUDGET

Paris, Berlin agree on future eurozone budget: French ministry source

France and Germany have agreed on the broad outlines of a proposed eurozone budget which they will present to EU finance ministers in Brussels on Monday, a French finance ministry source said.

Paris, Berlin agree on future eurozone budget: French ministry source
French Economy and Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire (R) and German Finance Minister and Vice-Chancellor Olaf Scholz. File photo: AFP

The common single-currency budget was one of French President Emmanuel Macron's key ideas for protecting the euro, but it caused differences between France and Germany, the region's two largest economies.

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire and Germany's minister, Olaf Scholz, will “jointly present a proposition on Monday… about the layout for a budget for the eurozone,” the ministry source told AFP.

“It's a major step forward,” the source said. “We will look forward to sharing with other members.”

The source said the amount of the budget has not been established as the proposal was to first set out the “architecture and main principles” of the budget.

According to a copy of the French-German proposal, the budget would be part of the EU budget structure and governed by the 19 euro members.

Macron will travel to Berlin at the weekend to meet with German Chancellor Angela Merkel where the two leaders will bolster their alliance as champions of a united Europe.

READ ALSO: France and Germany push for compromise on eurozone reform

SHOW COMMENTS