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Merkel, EU reject bailout for eastern Europe

2009-03-02 05:51:36

By CONSTANT BRAND, Associated Press Writer Constant Brand, Associated Press

Writer Sun Mar 1

BRUSSELS German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other EU leaders flatly rejected

a new multibillion euro (dollar) bailout for eastern Europe on Sunday,

suggesting that additional aid be given to struggling nations only on a

case-by-case basis.

Germany and the Netherlands also shot down suggestions that eastern European

countries that have seen their currencies plummet be given a quick entry to the

euro, which has remained strong against the U.S. dollar and Japanese yen. But

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the EU could look at reviewing the

stringent euro currency membership criteria and two-year waiting period once

the global economic crisis ends.

Germany, the region's largest economy, has been under rising pressure to take

the lead in rescuing eastern EU members staggering from sinking currencies,

shrinking demand for exports and rising debt, but Chancellor Angela Merkel

insisted a one-size-fits-all bailout was unwise.

"Saying that the situation is the same for all central and eastern European

states, I don't see that," said Merkel, adding "you cannot compare" the dire

situation in Hungary with that of other countries.

That tough stance came even as Hungarian Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany warned

that the global credit crunch was creating a widening economic chasm in the

27-nation bloc which threatened to rend Europe.

Noting that eastern members were being hit the hardest, he suggested setting up

an EU fund of up to euro190 billion ($241 billion) to help restore trust and

solvency in eastern members.

"We should not allow that a new Iron Curtain should be set up and divide

Europe," Gyurcsany told reporters.

Eight other EU nations had joined Hungary in vowing to pressure richer members

to back up vague pledges of support with action Poland, Slovakia, the Czech

Republic, Bulgaria, Romania and the three Baltic states. But Hungary's plan was

quickly shot down by Germany and others, who balked at the costs.

EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said eastern European countries

already were getting billions in emergency rescue funds and loans from the EU,

the World Bank and other financial institutions and did not need a sweeping new

bailout plan.

He said the EU has euro25 billion ($32 billion) in reserve to help member

nations. It already gave euro9.6 billion of that to Hungary and Latvia, the

first EU government to fail because of the global economic turmoil.

Gyurcsany acknowledged that other EU leaders had questioned his plan but

insisted they would study it.

"If you are speaking about Europe and you are facing this type of complicated

challenge, you have to respond in a way not just concentrating on independent

nations, but some regions as well," he said.

Gyurcsany said eastern EU countries could need up to euro300 billion ($380

billion), or 30 percent of the region's gross domestic product this year.

He warned that failure to offer bigger bailouts "could lead to massive

contractions" in eastern economies and "large-scale defaults" that would affect

Europe as a whole because of political unrest and immigration pressures.

Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek, who chaired Sunday's talks, promised that

the EU would not leave any nation "in the lurch."

Some EU nations notably Hungary, Poland and the Baltic countries of Estonia,

Latvia and Lithuania had urged the bloc to consider making it easier to join

the euro currency. The 16-nation currency has so far proved a stable financial

anchor in turbulent markets.

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said his country did not support changes in

criteria for joining the euro, but said it favors shortening the time

prospective members are required to stay in an exchange rate mechanism, which

demands low and controlled inflation, healthy public finances and a budget

deficit below 3 percent of GDP.

Current rules set out a minimum two-year waiting period.

"This is not a Polish initiative, but we would welcome it," Tusk said.

Other EU states said existing economic requirements for joining the shared

currency should not be relaxed.

Dutch Premier Jan Peter Balkenende joined Merkel in rejecting a "softening" of

euro membership criteria that would allow weaker economies to join and possibly

damage the strength of the currency. Balkenende said if a nation wants to join

"it must meet the minimum economic criteria."

Sunday's summit was the first of three high-level talks EU leaders have planned

to forge a common strategy to combat the worsening recession. Yet vague

statements issued by the leaders hardly appeared a unified stance.

French and German leaders made separate calls for more EU funds to keep

European car makers alive and insisted those subsidies would not be

protectionist.

Merkel and Sarkozy called EU subsidy guidelines too stingy and said they needed

to be updated. Sarkozy welcomed EU regulators' approval of France's euro7

billion ($8.95 billion) in loans for Renault and Peugeot Citroen PSA, which

came only after France said it would not require the two to buy from French

suppliers or safeguard jobs at French plants.

The Czech Republic had protested earlier that French auto measures were

protectionist.

EU leaders also agreed on guidelines for how governments could buy up toxic

assets from banks to try to unfreeze lending. Banks are putting cash aside to

cover huge potential losses from complex investments that have tumbled in value

during the financial crisis.

But Eurochambres, a business association that represents 19 million companies

across the EU, criticized the leaders for failing to come up with concrete

plans Sunday to stimulate the economy.

"This summit was yet another rather unproductive political showpiece, bringing

no concrete solutions to the dramatic economic situation and showing a worrying

lack of economic coordination among member states," said Arnaldo Abruzzini,

head of Eurochambres.