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                 IMF's Lagarde Calls for Eurozone Debt Sharing

   by VOA News

   The chief of the International Monetary Fund is calling for the
   17-nation euro currency bloc to accept more liability for each others'
   debts, but economic powerhouse Germany says it remains adamantly
   opposed to selling joint eurozone bonds.
   IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde told a London news conference
   Tuesday that with the economy contracting in the eurozone, more needs
   to be done to boost its growth and that wealthier countries need to
   share the burden with their debt-ridden neighbors.
   "We consider that more needs to be done, particularly by way of fiscal
   liability sharing and there are multiple ways to do that," she said.
   "More needs to be done in relation to supporting growth, particularly
   by way of structural reforms, certainly not by way of, you know,
   suggested stimulus because we do not think that the fiscal position of
   the member states can actually bear that on an aggregate basis."
   "So, there is still work under way but we certainly hope that the
   monetary zone that has been built for the last ten years will continue
   to be developed, to be strengthened and that the political will of the
   members will actually be conducive to that effect," she added.
   The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, representing
   34 of the world's largest economies, also called for selling joint
   bonds. The OECD slashed its forecast for the eurozone economy,
   predicting it would contract this year by one-tenth of a percentage
   point, down from the meager two-tenths of a percent growth it had
   earlier projected.
   New French President Francois Hollande is expected to push for the sale
   of eurobonds when the European Union's 27 leaders meet in Brussels
   Wednesday.
   But Germany, with the eurozone's strongest economy, and other
   wealthier, northern European countries have been staunchly opposed to
   such joint financing of eurozone debt. They are fearful that their low
   borrowing costs would increase sharply if they also were responsible
   for financing debt-ridden Greece, Italy, Spain and other financially
   troubled countries.
   A senior German official told reporters in Berlin that eurobonds
   "cannot be part of a growth package."
   Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter called Hollande's approach
   "nonsense." She described economic growth financed by more debt "a
   recipe from the day before yesterday."


   Some information for this report was provided by AP.
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   sharing/919986.html

References

   1. http://www.voanews.com/content/imfs_lagarde_calls_for_eurozone_debt_sharing/919986.html