Germany backs lower Greek rescue loan rate in Merkel turnaround
 
 
 German Chancellor Angela Merkel told lawmakers late on Thursday 
that  she would back lower interest rates for emergency loans if Greece agrees  to sell state assets and Ireland backs a common corporate tax base in  the euro region.
Merkel briefed a closed-door parliamentary  session late on Thursday in Berlin on her position as European Union  leaders seek to break a deadlock before a March 25 deadline on  reinforcing their bailout plan and coordinating economic policies, four  lawmakers who attended the session of the body’s European Affairs  Committee told Bloomberg.
Her willingness to back what she called a  moderate reduction in the cost of the rescue loans sought by Greece and  Ireland marked a turnaround.
The comments followed the first  acknowledgement by her government yesterday that an expansion of the  European Financial Stability Facility to lend its full capacity was on  the table.
As part of the quest for a comprehensive plan to stem  the debt crisis, the EU is nearing agreement on a plan to be put to  today’s summit to raise the region’s competitiveness and tighten  economic cooperation, German and French officials said.
The pact,  which includes chapters on competitiveness, labor, sustainable public  finances and the stability of financial systems, sets objectives rather  than binding targets, leaving countries free to find their own policy  mix, the officials said on condition of anonymity because the talks are  not public.
Merkel indicated support for raising the EFSF’s  effective lending capacity to its headline figure of 440 billion euros  and for making sure that the facility replacing it in 2013 can pay out  the full 500 billion euros if needed, the lawmakers said.
Still,  Merkel won’t support bond buying in the secondary market by the EFSF and  the future permanent rescue fund, she told lawmakers. The post-2013  fund can only be allowed to dispense aid as a last resort, she said.
                            
ekathimerini.com , Friday  March 11, 2011 (11:14)  
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Il punto della discussione sino a ieri sera.