Crisis in Italy
Spurs Fears of Euro Zone Break-up
Political
and economic crisis in
The
escalating crisis prompted European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso to
issue a stern warning of the dangers of splitting the zone. EU sources told
Reuters French and German officials had held discussions on just such a move.
"There cannot be peace and prosperity in the North or in the West of Europe, if there is no peace and prosperity in the South or in the East," Barroso said.
"There cannot be peace and prosperity in the North or in the West of Europe, if there is no peace and prosperity in the South or in the East," Barroso said.
According
to Reuters report, German Chancellor Angela Merkel weighed in with a call to
arms. She said Europe 's plight was now so
"unpleasant" that deep structural reforms were needed quickly,
warning the rest of the world would not wait. "That will mean more Europe,
not less Europe," she told a conference in Berlin .
She
called for changes in EU treaties after French President Nicolas Sarkozy
advocated a two-speed Europe in which euro zone countries accelerate and deepen
integration while an expanding group outside the currency bloc stays more
loosely connected -- a signal that some members may have to quit the euro.
"It
is time for a breakthrough to a new Europe ,"
Merkel said. "A community that says, regardless of what happens in the
rest of the world, that it can never again change its ground rules, that
community simply can't survive."
The
European Central Bank, the only effective bulwark against market attacks,
intervened to buy Italian bonds in large amounts but remained reluctant to go
further and Italy 's
10-year bond yields shot above 7 percent, a level widely deemed unsustainable,
as investor confidence evaporated.
"Financial
assistance is not in the cards," one euro zone official said, adding that
the bloc was not even considering extending a precautionary credit line to Rome .
POLICY VACUUM
Italy replaced Greece at the
center of the crisis as Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's insistence on
elections instead of an interim government threatened prolonged instability.
Having
lost his majority in a parliamentary vote, Berlusconi confirmed he would resign
after implementing economic reforms demanded by the European Union, and said
Italy must then hold an election in which he would not stand.
He
opposed any form of transitional or unity government, which the opposition and
many in the markets favor, and said polls were not likely until February,
leaving a three-month policy vacuum in which markets could create havoc.
Italian
President Giorgio Napolitano said there was no doubt about the resignation of
Berlusconi once economic reforms were implemented by parliament within days.
"Therefore,
within a short time either a new government will be formed ... or parliament
will be dissolved to immediately begin an electoral campaign," Napolitano
said.
Even
with the exit of a man who came to symbolize scandal and empty promises, it
will not be easy for Italy
to convince markets it can cut its huge debt, liberalize the labor market,
attack tax evasion and boost productivity.
Worries
that the debt crisis could be infiltrating the core of the euro zone were
reflected in the spread of 10-year French government bonds over their German
equivalent blowing out to a euro era high around 140 basis points.
Policymakers
outside the euro area kept up pressure for more decisive action to stop the
crisis spreading.
Christine Lagarde, head of the International Monetary Fund, told a financial forum inBeijing that Europe 's
debt crisis risked plunging the global economy into a Japan-style "lost
decade."
Christine Lagarde, head of the International Monetary Fund, told a financial forum in
"If
we do not act boldly and if we do not act together, the economy around the
world runs the risk of downward spiral of uncertainty, financial instability
and potential collapse of global demand."
Berlusconi
has reluctantly conceded that the IMF can oversee Italian reform efforts.
Euro zone finance ministers agreed on Monday on a road map for leveraging the 17-nation currency bloc's 440-billion-euro ($600 billion) rescue fund to shield larger economies likeItaly
and Spain
from a possible Greek default.
Euro zone finance ministers agreed on Monday on a road map for leveraging the 17-nation currency bloc's 440-billion-euro ($600 billion) rescue fund to shield larger economies like
(Reuters)
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