Merkel and Macron set eurozone reform plan deadline
December 15, 2017German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Friday that she wants to find "a common position" with French President Emmanuel Macron, on how to reform the eurozone by next March.
"We will find a common solution, because it is crucial for Europe," Merkel told reports at the end of a two-day EU leaders' summit in Brussels. "The will is there, that's the deciding factor."
Macron said he hoped to make progress with Germany on a reform package for the single currency and that all 19 eurozone members would agree to a "roadmap" by June.
Read more: Macron: more Europe, please
Macron also expressed his optimism that the two nations would find a "convergence" in their plans. "Our aim is to have an agreement in March because at that stage a political step will have been completed in Germany and we will have the capacity to construct together much more clearly on these issues," said the French president.
What is Macron's vision for the eurozone?
The French president plans to shore up the eurozone through:
- The creation of an EU finance minister role.
- That minister would be responsible for a joint eurozone budget.
- The minister would also lead a new agency tasked with issuing eurozone bonds, helping to finance public investment and providing a cushion against a future economic shocks.
Germany hesitant ... until now?
Berlin has so far been reluctant to subscribe to Macron's plans. The notion of pooling financial resources is viewed by many in the Bundestag as form of "transfer union" among the 19 eurozone states, which would see Germany pay in more than it gets out. The federal government is also reluctant to share risks with their more indebted eurozone partners, such as France, Italy and Greece.
Read more: Opinion: Angela Merkel is still Angela Merkel in the EU
However, Merkel, who herself has expressed reservations over Macron's vision, said she was optimistic that a joint plan would be agreed. When it comes to major European issues, there have always been "struggles between Germany and France, where at the beginning there are differences ... but in the end there is common ground," the chancellor said. "I'm sure that will the case here, too."
dm/rt (Reuters, dpa)