Very Very Ordinary
At the Start
- Joined
- Nov 24, 2010
- Messages
- 327
Total or partial?
Probably lay and back in that order.
Probably lay and back in that order.
No.Could it be that the historical fractures will eventually cause a final sundering of the 'community', showing it to have been a false construct all along?
3/1 about a euro breakup in the next 18 months.
Would you back or lay?
Grey, if we posit that the Chinese come galloping to the rescue on their little steppes ponies, can it still remain a Eurozone, once an outside 'sponsor' is in the mix? Aren't we just back to a free-for-all system? Or are there currently bans in place against this?
EU demands £25bn lifeline from the UK
David Cameron will come under pressure today to resist demands to contribute more than £25 billion to a new eurozone bail-out.
By Tim Ross, and Bruno Waterfield
9:51PM GMT 18 Dec 2011
European finance ministers will aim to agree a new €200 billion (£167.7 billion) loan to the International Monetary Fund as part of a deal to save the single currency.
Three quarters of the money is expected to come from eurozone members, but Britain will also be asked to provide funds.
Figures suggest European Union officials expect British taxpayers to be the second largest contributor. The Prime Minister has repeatedly promised not to provide any extra funding for the IMF for the specific purpose of saving the euro and Britain is already liable for £12 billion of loans and guarantees to Ireland, Greece and Portugal.
Earlier this month, EU countries set today as the deadline to raise up to €200 billion in new loans for the IMF to deal with the eurozone crisis.
Finance ministers will hold a conference call in an attempt to reach agreement on the war chest.
An EU official said Britain was still expected to contribute €30.9 billion (£25.9 billion), leaving the country as the second biggest contributor to the new IMF fund behind Germany and equal with France.
Any suggestion that Britain will pay more towards the bailing out debt-ridden eurozone economies will cause anger among Tory Euro-sceptics, particularly if the eurozone nations do not pay their fair share.
The Treasury said the Chancellor would reject any fresh demands for a British contribution to a eurozone bail out.
However, a spokesman left open the possibility of a broader IMF deal being reached in future, involving other G20 countries.
The Treasury spokesman said: “As a long standing supporter of the IMF, Britain stands ready to increase IMF resources alongside other countries around the world in order to help any country in distress.
“But we will only provide more resources for the IMF if the eurozone do more to strengthen their firewall, and we will not contribute to anything that is only available to eurozone countries.
“Nor will we participate in an increase in IMF resources that only comes from EU countries without the participation of other G20 countries.”
Under IMF rules, Britain would underwrite a portion of loans to struggling countries, but only pay out if they defaulted. Only countries that are members of the IMF and contribute to its wealth can apply for loans.
The Prime Minister has argued that no country has ever lost money by lending to the IMF.
If you consider taking loans to be begging then yes you are. You are getting the loans cheaper because the bond markets realise the international community cannot allow you to fail.