EU
to give Spain, France more time to cut deficit: press
The
European Commission will propose giving Spain, France and several
other euro zone states more time to cut their public deficits below
the target limit of 3 percent of GDP, newspaper El Pais said on
Saturday.
25
December, 2012
Citing
senior Spanish and European Union sources, the Madrid-based daily
said France could get an extra year, allowing it to narrow its fiscal
gap by 2014, while Spain would be given one or two more years beyond
that date.
France
said on Saturday that it would maintain its deficit-reduction goal
for 2013 regardless of any softer line from Brussels. A Commission
spokeswoman declined to comment on the report.
Spain's
fiscal targets are to be reassessed in February, EU Economic and
Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said last month. No
additional austerity efforts are needed until 2014, he added, when
more structural reforms are likely to be required.
France
does not appear to need additional belt-tightening and may have room
for a "softer adjustment", the commissioner also said in an
interview with France's Le Monde newspaper on Friday.
But
France said on Saturday it planned to stick to its 3 percent goal for
next year. "Our public finance path remains unchanged as it was
fixed in the autumn," an aide to Prime Minister Jean-Marc
Ayrault said.
The
French government's 2013 budget is based on a 0.8 percent growth
forecast for the year - more optimistic than the flat economic output
predicted by Brussels and the International Monetary Fund.
European
and Spanish sources had said earlier this month that Spain's fiscal
path was likely be loosened to offset the country's second recession
in three years.
Such
decisions need a formal discussion between the 27 European
commissioners as well as a political green light from euro zone
finance ministers.
Spain
sought support from its European partners this year for its ailing
banks, hit by a burst property bubble.
Recession
is also undermining government efforts to keep the public debt burden
in check, and financial markets expect Madrid to seek sovereign aid
sometime next year.
Madrid
is to unveil new curbs on index-linked pension payouts and accelerate
increases to the retirement age. Both EU demands must be met for
Spain to tap international aid, lower its debt costs and fix its
stricken economy.
According
to El Pais, the Commission has agreed on a new Spanish deficit path
of 7 percent of economic output in 2012 and 6 percent in 2013. That
compares to current targets of 6.3 percent for 2012 and 4.5 percent
for 2013.
Senior
Spanish officials told Reuters this month the deficit would probably
come in at around 7 percent at year end.
Spain's
17 highly devolved autonomous regions are broadly on course to meet
their deficit target of 1.5 percent of GDP, while the central
government is heading for a deficit close to 5.5 percent, including
social security spending.
Greece
Should Write Off Billions of Overdue Taxes, Report Says
24
December, 2012
Greece
should write off part of the 53 billion euros ($70 billion) of
outstanding taxes owed to it as it will only be able to collect up to
20 percent of that amount, a report by the European Union and
International Monetary Fund showed.
More
focus is needed on collection from the 1,500 biggest debtors, which
make up two-thirds of the total amount owed to the state, according
to an e-mailed copy of the November report from the Athens-based
finance ministry today. More staff should be allocated to auditing
those cases and specific targets for 2013 should be set, it said.
Greece
hasn’t met five of 10 six-month targets set as part of its tax
system overhaul and stronger enforcement of value added tax
collection as well as speeding up VAT returns should be a priority,
according to the report.
The
report is based on a visit to Athens by a technical EU and IMF team
between Oct. 16 and Oct. 22.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.