Europe leaders agree on budget discipline treaty
THE leaders of 25 European countries yesterday signed a new treaty designed to prevent the 17 members of the eurozone from living beyond their means and avoid a repeat of the region's crippling debt crisis.
The leaders hope the rules for budget discipline set out in the accord, known as the fiscal compact, will also lead to closer political and economic integration in the eurozone.
"It will bring us, as it were, the economic and monetary union that is finally walking on two legs," said European Council President Herman van Rompuy, who oversaw the drafting of the treaty and its formal signing in Brussels, Belgium, yesterday.
Only Britain and the Czech Republic decided not to sign the agreement, a move that triggered concern over a rift in the 27-country European Union.
The fact that not every EU state backed the new rules forced the others to set up the separate treaty, rather than integrating the rules into EU law. That prevents its signatories from using some of the union's institutions - such as the European Commission - to monitor and implement the treaty.
Many Europeans have grown weary of the EU and the euro. Two years of painful austerity in the poorer countries have taken their economic toll, while many in the richer countries are getting frustrated over funding the expensive bailouts for Greece, Ireland and Portugal.
Others fear that the tighter spending rules will limit governments' room to maneuver in tough economic times and force German-style fiscal discipline on countries with vastly different economies and cultures.
Though the summit was held under the calmest conditions in financial markets in months, the economic outlook is darkening. Unemployment is at a record high and several countries are forecast to fall back into recession this year.
"We remain in a fragile situation," German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned. "The crisis is far from over."
After a relatively smooth drafting process, the most difficult part of bringing the new rules into force begins. All participating governments have to ratify the treaty, either through parliamentary or popular votes - a process that may prove difficult in some places.
The leaders hope the rules for budget discipline set out in the accord, known as the fiscal compact, will also lead to closer political and economic integration in the eurozone.
"It will bring us, as it were, the economic and monetary union that is finally walking on two legs," said European Council President Herman van Rompuy, who oversaw the drafting of the treaty and its formal signing in Brussels, Belgium, yesterday.
Only Britain and the Czech Republic decided not to sign the agreement, a move that triggered concern over a rift in the 27-country European Union.
The fact that not every EU state backed the new rules forced the others to set up the separate treaty, rather than integrating the rules into EU law. That prevents its signatories from using some of the union's institutions - such as the European Commission - to monitor and implement the treaty.
Many Europeans have grown weary of the EU and the euro. Two years of painful austerity in the poorer countries have taken their economic toll, while many in the richer countries are getting frustrated over funding the expensive bailouts for Greece, Ireland and Portugal.
Others fear that the tighter spending rules will limit governments' room to maneuver in tough economic times and force German-style fiscal discipline on countries with vastly different economies and cultures.
Though the summit was held under the calmest conditions in financial markets in months, the economic outlook is darkening. Unemployment is at a record high and several countries are forecast to fall back into recession this year.
"We remain in a fragile situation," German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned. "The crisis is far from over."
After a relatively smooth drafting process, the most difficult part of bringing the new rules into force begins. All participating governments have to ratify the treaty, either through parliamentary or popular votes - a process that may prove difficult in some places.
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