Germany’s Merkel in China for eurozone talks

German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrived in China on Thursday for a three-day visit that will focus on the eurozone crisis, Iran, and Syria. Her trip comes just days after China was hit by deadly unrest in Tibetan-inhabited areas, and the leader of Europe’s biggest economy will also broach the issue of human rights with her Chinese counterparts. Germany and China, the world’s top two exporters, enjoy vibrant trade relations and... [more]

American Airlines aims to cut 13,000 jobs

The parent of American Airlines wants to eliminate about 13,000 jobs — 15 percent of its workforce — as the nation’s third-biggest airline remakes itself under bankruptcy protection. The company proposes to end its traditional pension plans, a move strongly opposed by the airline’s unions and the U.S. pension-insurance agency, and to stop paying for retiree health benefits. AMR Corp. said Wednesday that it must cut labor... [more]

Jobs and growth are the answer to the crisis, says prime minister of Holland

Europe needs to become more competitive and create more jobs in order to ensure its future prosperity, Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte said after Monday night’s informal EU summit on the eurozone debt crisis. ‘There are currently 23 million people in the EU without work and in the long term, that is not sustainable,’ Rutte said. ‘The internal market can be an important motor for growth, but only 40% of the EU economy... [more]

Merkel pushes through EU fiscal pact

Chancellor Angela Merkel and other EU leaders attempted to solve Europe’s debt crisis on Monday evening with a German-driven treaty meant to end deficits. But the announcement that that 25 of 27 European Union nations had adopted the new pact on budgetary discipline was overshadowed by outrage over a German suggestion heavily indebted Greece submit its finances to EU review. The idea of placing the cradle of European democracy under the... [more]

IMF sees low impact on Asian finance from EU crisis

The eurozone financial crisis has had only a limited impact on Asia, and in fact has created opportunities for Asian banks, according to a top IMF official. Anoop Singh, the International Monetary Fund’s Asia director, said that if the eurozone plunged into recession, it would definitely hurt Asia, where exports to Europe are an important driver of growth. “In India as in other economies demand for exports would certainly be... [more]

Euro zone banks may double emergency loans from ECB

Some of the euro zone’s biggest banks have told the Financial Times that they are preparing to tap the European Central Bank’s emergency funding scheme for up to twice as much as the ECB supplied in its December auction. The banks told the FT that they may double or triple their request for funds in the ECB’s three-year money auction on Feb 29, a further sign of the liquidity squeeze faced by the banks, the paper... [more]

ECB slashes bond buys as Greek loss debate rages

The ECB all but halted its purchases of government bonds last week despite fresh financial market pressure on Portugal and as calls intensified for the bank to take losses on its Greek debt. Controversy surrounding the ECB’s bond buying programme has escalated in recent weeks. The IMF and private sector have urged it to write down its holdings of Greek bonds, or at least forgo profits, as part of a deal to stabilise the country’s... [more]

EU leaders agree on permanent bailout fund

EU leaders reached agreement at a summit on Monday on the introduction of a permanent euro zone bailout mechanism from July 2012, with a treaty governing the fund to be signed at a later date, three EU officials told Reuters. The European Stability Mechanism, which will have a lending capacity of 500 billion euros, will take over from the European Financial Stability Facility, a temporary mechanism that has so far been used to bail out Ireland... [more]

EU split deepens over Greece

European leaders faced a damaging split Monday as a German plan to strip Greece of budget sovereignty overshadowed EU plans to focus on a deal on deficits and talk about jobs. The idea, floated by Berlin, to strip the government in Athens of its sovereignty and give the power to make decisions on finances to a special EU commissioner, opened up clear fault-lines both within and outside the eurozone. It could ultimately place in doubt... [more]

Europe bids to turn from crisis to growth

European leaders bid Monday to move away from the debt crisis and focus on much-needed growth as a new battle erupted over putting the eurozone’s Achilles heel, Greece, under EU supervision. European Union heads of state and government hold their first summit of the year from 1400 GMT to finalise a new German-driven pact to toughen budget discipline. They do so amid a general strike in Belgium over deepening austerity in their own... [more]

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