Business News : Euro zone agrees to boost rescue capacity

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COPENHAGEN (Business News) - Euro zone finance ministers agreed on Friday to increase their financial firewall to 700 billion euros to ward off a new flare-up of Europe's sovereign debt crisis, drawing a positive initial reaction from markets and G20 partners.


The 17-nation currency area agreed to combine two rescue funds to make 500 billion euros of new funds available in case of emergency until mid-2013, on top of 200 billion euros already committed to bailouts for Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

The executive European Commission had proposed raising the total to 940 billion euros, with 740 billion in new money, but EU paymaster Germany resisted a bigger increase.

International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde welcomed the decision, saying it would help the global lender raise more resources to fight contagion from the European crisis if needed.

The euro rose and Spanish bond yields fell as investors weighed the firewall move and a draconian Spanish austerity budget.

Spain unveiled savings worth 27 billion euros ($ 35.85 billion) this year, roughl y half from spending cuts and half from revenue increases, in a bid to convince European partners and investors it can rein in its budget deficit.

"Today's decision is a classic European compromise. It was as far as the German government was willing to go and it was the minimum most other euro zone countries were expecting," said Carsten Brzeski, economist at ING bank in Brussels.

"Obviously, a bigger increase along the lines of earlier discussed options could have sent a stronger signal and would have been more convincing," he said.

"With today's increase, the role of the European Central Bank as euro zone fire brigade is likely to continue."

The ECB averted a looming credit crunch in December by flooding euro zone banks with cheap three-year loans, calming bond markets and buying time for euro zone economic reforms.

An official statement said the ministers had lifted the combined lending capacity of the temporary European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) and the permanent European Stability Mechanism (ESM) to 700 billion euros from 500 billion.

"The current overall ceiling for ESM/EFSF lending ... will be raised to 700 billion euros," it said. "All together, the euro area is mobilising an overall firewall of approximately 800 billion euros, more than 1 trillion dollars."

The higher number was arrived at by adding in bilateral loans that euro zone countries granted to Greece under a first bailout, money disbursed by the EFSF and from a smaller third fund controlled by the European Commission.

The ESM will have only 200 billion euros in its first year from July since capital is due to be paid in over three years. Friday's decision means 240 billio n of uncommitted EFSF funds could be tapped if necessary until the ESM becomes bigger.

IMF BOOST

French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said the decision put the euro zone in a strong position to persuade other major economies next month to increase IMF resources. The United States, China, Brazil and Britain had all said the euro zone should first do more to help itself.

Mexico, chairing the G20 major economies, said the European agreement was an important step towards boosting IMF funding.

"It's a major effort on the part of Europe, in line with what was discussed during the last meeting of G20 ministers," Mexican Deputy Finance Minister Gerardo Rodriguez told Business News.

"Now we have to work within the G20 for additional resources for the IMF. That was the agreement.

Some bond market players questioned whether the compromise would provide sufficient money to help Spain, the euro zone's number four economy, if it needs a bailout to overcome a banking crisis due to the collapse of a real estate bubble.

Gizem Kara, European economist at BNP Paribas, said euro zone governments had opted for the minimum amount that would be needed to cover the funding needs of Spain and Italy for the rest of this year and next if they were shut out of markets.

But Italian Deputy Economy Minister Vittorio Grilli said there was no idea of using the money for Spain. "It is not an option on the table," he told reporters.

Tempers flared when Eurogroup Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker scrapped a scheduled news conference, blaming Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter for announcing the decision prematurely. She later apologised.

Juncker said the appointment of a new European Central Bank executive board member had been postponed until mid-April. He had earlier said fellow Luxembourger Yves Mersch was the strongest candidate for the ECB job.

France's Baroin said more time was needed to agree on what he called "a carousel of positions", including a successor to Juncker as Eurogroup chairman, expected to be German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble. The package also involves the heads of the ESM and the London-based European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, for which Paris has a candidate.

A decision would only be taken in June after France's presidential election, Baroin said.

SPANISH AUSTERITY

Countries sharing the euro have already agreed to adopt more strictly enforced balanced-budget rules in an effort to convince m arkets that their public finances will be sustainable.

They also agreed to slap fines on countries that run excessive budget deficits or have large imbalances in their economies.

Spain, which has rejected all talk of seeking assistance, outlined a budget designed to cut the deficit to 5.3 percent of gross domestic product this year from 8.5 percent in 2011 despite a recession.

Details will go to parliament on Tuesday but the government said public sector pay would be frozen, ministries' spending would be cut by 16.9 percent and corporate tax revenue increased by 17.8 percent.

"This is a budget that will be convincing, I am sure of that, and show the Spanish government's commitment to austerity and fiscal consolidation," Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said in Copenhagen.

He played down a general strike and mass street protests on Thursday that highlighted the scale of opposition to a new labour law making it easier to fire workers and dismantling collective wage bargaining. Hundreds of thousands of Spaniards marched in protest, with violence flaring in Barcelona.


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