by jerryberry » Thu Dec 16, 2010 12:37 am
The summer meeting of Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas (read neh-chaas) and German Chancellor Angela Merkel took a special twist, as reported by Dow Jones Newswires on Sunday, when the two leaders began talking about ways to save the euro from its sovereign-debt malaise.
During the informal private part of their meeting, held in August, Ms. Merkel asked Mr. Necas to join the euro zone despite the ex-communist country’s desire to steer clear from the debt-infested currency union, a person familiar with the meeting told Dow Jones Newswires.
Fiscally sound Czechs would help Germany increase the weight of prudent euro-zone members in contrast to profligates like Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy, Ms. Merkel told the Czech leader, according to the person familiar with the discussion.
“Such a request was raised at the meeting and the reply by Prime Minister Necas was that if a northern European euro area existed, the Czechs would join the next day,” the person said.
According to the person, the two leaders hit it off very well during their first meeting, partly because they both hold degrees in physics and share memories of growing up during the Cold War on the Soviet-controlled side of the Iron Curtain.
The leaked thoughts on a dual-speed euro zone from the summer Czech-German meeting sync with ideas about a “core Europe,” broached as early as 1994 by Wolfgang Schäuble, a German parliamentarian at the time and the current finance minister in Ms. Merkel’s cabinet. The idea centers on creating an economically and strategically stable core of the continent, comprising Germany, France, the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg, which .
Over the weekend, Mr. Necas’s suggestion to form the fiscally prudent euro zone received unexpected support from two German business associations, even though Berlin government officials remain cautious in comments on the issue of an euro north-south divide.
On Sunday, the associations of German family-run businesses and young entrepreneurs wrote a letter to Ms. Merkel asking her to consider forming a new currency union that would include only economically strong and fiscally responsible nations.
The Czech Republic, a European Union member since 2004, is obliged to adopt the euro eventually, provided it meets criteria that include limits on public debt and fiscal deficits. Czechs hold sovereign debt equal to 37% of the country’s gross domestic product, below the euro-zone criteria of 60% and about half the 80% average of current euro-zone members.
Czechs are above the government deficit ceiling of 3% of GDP. But Mr. Necas’s cabinet is working to trim the gap to below 3% of GDP by 2013 from more than 5% this year, which would put the Czech Republic among the European Union’s most fiscally prudent members.
If you can't win by reason, go for volume