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Topic: Step aside IMF - Here comes the European monetary fund (EMF) Replies: 1 posts
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EUcitizens
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« on: March 03, 2010, 11:07:04 PM »

As always crises only makes the EU stronger, and this is exactly what seems to happen with the greek crisis....
Step aside IMF, here comes the European monetary fund (EMF)

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www.eubusiness.com - Italian President Giorgio Napolitano called on Wednesday for the creation of a European monetary fund to help eurozone nations in trouble.

"The European Central Bank (and) the European institutions are aware that there's something missing from our common tool box to tackle unforeseen and serious crises in one of the eurozone nations," Napolitano told a press conference at the European Commission in Brussels.

Asked whether he saw a need for a European, rather than international, monetary fund he replied that the current Greek crisis "demonstrates the need for such an instrument to prevent and deal with such crises."

Napolitano added that membership of the 16-nation eurozone brings with it "an obligation for (fiscal) discipline."

The idea of a European fund set up to support eurozone nations has previously been advanced by some economists and political figures.

European Socialists on Tuesday called for the creation of a such a fund, which they said should be managed by the European Investment Bank (EIB), to help Greece and others ward off speculators as they tackle budget crises.

Under their scheme the EIB, Europe's lending arm, would borrow from the market at a reasonable interest rate. Countries in crisis could then borrow these funds at a similar rate as others are able to do, the Socialists said in a statement.

Such a system would protect the eurozone against speculative attacks on sovereign debt and create conditions in which a sovereign default by any eurozone member state "is clearly judged impossible by the markets," the European Socialists said.
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« Reply #1 on: March 03, 2010, 11:09:30 PM »

Here is another article about the subject as well from Financial Times:

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www.FT.com - If nothing else, a positive aspect of Greece’s plight has been the wave of ideas on how the eurozone could operate more effectively in the future.

A big shortcoming identified by many has been the lack of proper “crisis management” procedures, which have arguably exacerbated Greece’s difficulties. Now - just in time for the EU leaders’ summit in Brussels this week - comes an ingenious solution for a European Monetary Fund, put forward by Daniel Gros, director of the Brussels-based Centre for European Policy Studies, and Thomas Mayer, chief economist at Deutsche Bank.

Their idea is for a sort of eurozone version of the International Monetary Fund, which could provide emergency loans to struggling countries or ensure a default was orderly, with minimum effect for other eurozone countries. It would be funded by contributions from countries in the weakest financial position, calculated according to how grievous was their abuse of the EU’s fiscal rules as set out in its ”stability and growth pact”.

An attraction of the proposal is that it provides a neat answer to the “IMF or EU?” question. While the IMF has lots of experience in rescuing countries, its deployment to help a eurozone country such as Greece would worry those who thought the eurozone should sort out its own problems (”Washington: butt out”). But the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, is ill-equipped for such a task.

Gros and Mayer add that a European Monetary Fund would protect the interests of countries such as Germany, which currently face a “lose-lose” situation. If Greece goes under, either they help pay the cost of a bail-out, or they allow a collapse - and their banking system bears the brunt of the impact.

Another alluring feature of their plan - which could appeal to the European Central Bank - is that by allowing the orderly bankruptcy of a eurozone country, it minimises the problems of “moral hazard” (by which Greece is encouraged to act recklessly because it knows there will be an eventual bail-out). As the authors conclude: “We should by now have learned that policy should not be geared towards preventing failure, but preparing for it.”
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