Eurozone ministers to continue talks on Greece bailout

Eurozone finance ministers were to confer by telephone on Saturday after 12 hours of talks in Athens failed to produce a breakthrough on a deal to bail out Greece, the Greek finance minister said. Evangelos Venizelos added that a planned meeting by eurozone ministers on Greece originally scheduled for Monday would now be held on Wednesday. “I will participate in a Eurogroup telephone conference at 1230 GMT” to discuss details... [more]

Greece says 2011 budget deficit will beat forecast

Greece expects its 2011 budget deficit will be smaller than expected at between 9.1 and 9.4 percent of GDP, thanks to an emergency property tax, a finance ministry official said on Friday, a development that could help Athens in its bailout talks with the EU and IMF. Greece, which is racing to complete talks with the EU and the IMF on a second bailout worth 130 billion euros, had previously estimated that the deficit would be above 9.5 percent... [more]

Wen says China has no intention to ‘buy Europe’

China’s Premier Wen Jiabao said Friday the Asian giant had neither the ability nor the intention to “buy Europe”, amid concerns over growing Chinese investment in debt-stricken eurozone economies. China is “willing to cooperate with Europe to fight the current crisis. Some people say this means China wants to buy Europe”, Wen told a German-China business forum in the southern city of Guangzhou. “This a... [more]

China may invest more in EU debt fund

China is considering how to get “more deeply involved” in resolving Europe’s debt crisis by co-operating more closely with European rescue funds, Wen Jiabao, Chinese premier, said on Thursday. China “is investigating and evaluating concrete ways in which it can, via the IMF, get more deeply involved in solving the European debt problem through [European Stability Mechanism/European Financial Stability Facility] channels,”... [more]

Irish central bank slashes 2012 growth forecasts

Ireland’s central bank slashed its growth forecast for 2012 by almost three-quarters on Thursday and said a longer than projected global downturn would put Dublin’s deficit reduction targets for this year and next in doubt. The monetary authority said it expected a 0.5 percent uptick in gross domestic product (GDP) this year, down from the 1.8 percent it projected in October, putting it in line with Ireland’s official creditors... [more]

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]

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