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    Default French,German leaders urge election of eurozone chief

    French, German leaders urge elected eurozone chief
    By DON MELVIN, Associated Press – 2 hours ago
    BRUSSELS (AP) — The leaders of France and Germany said Wednesday that they want the heads of the eurozone countries to elect the president of a new "economic government" who would direct regular summits to respond to the continent's financial crisis.
    For many in the markets, the proposal fell short of hopes: a grand plan to save the euro and, in particular, a sign the eurozone was moving toward a single bond issued by the 17 countries.
    French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel outlined their proposals in a letter to Herman Van Rompuy, president of the European Council. They said that they hoped Van Rompuy would get the job.
    The two leaders, who met in Paris on Tuesday, called the twice-yearly summits "the cornerstone of the new economic government of the eurozone."
    However, heads of the eurozone governments already hold summits, though not regularly scheduled ones, under the chairmanship of Van Rompuy. The first was in 2008.
    Sarkozy and Merkel also raised the politically sensitive issue of pensions, saying eurozone states should rapidly implement structural reforms, including changes in "retirement policy." They did not elaborate.
    As global stocks fell, shares in stock exchange operators were hit particularly hard on news the two leaders want to introduce a tax on financial transactions. Deutsche Boerse slid 3.7 percent and the London Stock Exchange Group PLC was down 4.7 percent. Merkel and Sarkozy said the two countries' finance ministers would come up with a proposal by September that would be forwarded to the European Commission.
    A transaction tax — a small percentage taken from foreign exchange and share transactions, for instance — has been proposed as a source of money to pay for bank bailouts. But European Central Bank head Jean-Claude Trichet says it would only work if introduced globally. The U.S. is also against the idea.
    Yusuf Heusen, senior sales trader at IG Index, said the news was hurting the shares. "It's worth bearing in mind, however, that this is simply a proposal and there are many hurdles to be overcome, but without doubt it's going to be squarely in focus in the weeks and months ahead."
    German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert, said the proposals would bring a "higher level of commitment" to efforts to stabilize budgets and fight debt. Yet Wednesday's letter seemed to back away from the boldest proposal Sarkozy had put forward a day earlier — the creation of a eurozone economic government. The letter gave few details and described it primarily as a reinforcement of current policies.
    Former Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt told VRT radio the biannual summits would "absolutely not create an economic government," and called the proposal window dressing.
    A prominent opposition lawmaker in Germany was equally unimpressed.
    "What has been proposed here isn't a European economic government, but that Mr. Van Rompuy will be allowed to give an occasional report to Ms. Merkel and Mr. Sarkozy," Juergen Trittin, a co-leader of the Greens' parliamentary group, told Radio Eins.
    Analysts said the proposals would do little to pull Europe out of its quagmire.
    "It's all very long-term stuff, which is why the outcome's been quite disappointing," said Jennifer McKeown, a European economist at Capital Economics. "It doesn't address the current problems."
    She said Sarkozy and Merkel had avoided the only real solution: a close fiscal union in which struggling countries could receive aid quickly without long negotiations. The eurobond would be one likely outcome of a closer union and would allow weaker countries to borrow more cheaply since the bonds would be backed by the entire eurozone. It might, however, raise costs for a powerhouse like Germany.
    Sarkozy and Merkel said Tuesday that a eurobond might eventually be created, but not in the near future. Eurobonds are viewed with suspicion in Germany, where critics say they would encourage other countries to continue running up debt.
    Without such a move, the eurozone is doomed, said McKeown.
    "The likely outcome is the eurozone ceases to exist," she said, though the stronger core countries, like Germany, the Netherlands and France, might continue to band together.
    ___
    DiLorenzo contributed from Paris. Associated Press writers David McHugh in Frankfurt and Geir Moulson in Berlin also contributed to this report.
    (This version CORRECTS Corrects attribution to show that critics, rather than Siebert, say eurobonds would encourage countries to run up debt. Fixes spelling in paragraph 2. Fixes contributor line.)
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    Default Re: French,German leaders urge election of eurozone chief

    I would STRONGLY at this point, very, very STRONGLY URGE each of you to get a copy and READ a book by Mark Steyn called "After America: Armageddon".

    Mark lays out precisely what is happening and what will happen here in the US (actually what IS happening here in the US).

    Guys this is serious business.

    When the government gets so huge no one is any longer responsible for anything, we're completely doomed.

    Europe is on it's last legs.

    We're next and we're well into the fall.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: French,German leaders urge election of eurozone chief

    Quote Originally Posted by Rick Donaldson View Post
    I would STRONGLY at this point, very, very STRONGLY URGE each of you to get a copy and READ a book by Mark Steyn called "After America: Armageddon".

    Mark lays out precisely what is happening and what will happen here in the US (actually what IS happening here in the US).

    Guys this is serious business.

    When the government gets so huge no one is any longer responsible for anything, we're completely doomed.

    Europe is on it's last legs.

    We're next and we're well into the fall.

    "Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances which permit this norm to be exceeded -- here and there, now and then -- are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of a society, the people then slip back into abject poverty. This is known as `bad luck'."

    ~ Robert Heinlein

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    Default Re: French,German leaders urge election of eurozone chief

    You've read the book, Toad. I'm proud of you.

    Libertatem Prius!


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