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2011-10-26
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German Vote Backs Bailout Fund as Rifts Remain in Talks

27iht-euro-popup.jpg

PARIS — European leaders struggled Wednesday to reassure the world they were making progress in overcoming the two-year-old euro-zone debt crisis, with German lawmakers approving a proposal to strengthen an emergency bailout fund ahead of an emergency summit meeting later in the day promoted as the moment for a comprehensive solution.

        The vote to expand the bailout fund, which passed by a strong margin in Germany’s lower house, came after Chancellor Angela Merkel, in a plea for domestic support, implored lawmakers to overcome their aversion to risk and put the might of Germany, Europe’s strongest economy, firmly behind efforts to get control of the crisis, which has caused economic anxiety and unnerved financial markets far beyond Europe’s borders.

        “The world is looking at Germany, whether we are strong enough to accept responsibility for the biggest crisis since World War II,” Mrs. Merkel said in an address to the Parliament in Berlin. “It would be irresponsible not to assume the risk.”

        The administration of President Nicholas Sarkozy of France, who has also sought to project his intention for a decisive outcome at the summit in Brussels, said there was no other choice. “France is totally mobilized and engaged in the success of today’s summit,” Mr. Sarkozy’s budget minister, Valerie Pecresse, told reporters in Cannes, France, where he was preparing for a Group of 20 summit there next month.

        Nonetheless, fissures and significant disagreements among the Europeans were still unresolved ahead of the summit, particularly concerning Italy, the euro zone’s third-largest economy, where Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi won only provisional support for economic reforms demanded by his European partners.

        The overall euro deal under discussion is complicated, including a deep restructuring of Greek debt, an injection of new capital into European banks made vulnerable by exposure to sovereign debt and an expansion of a bailout fund so that it can ward off a financial panic in Italy as well as in the relatively small economies of Greece and Portugal.

        On several previous occasions, European leaders have promised systemic changes to resolve the euro’s troubles, only to come up with a patchwork that fails to mollify the markets and just delays the day of reckoning. The outcome after the Wednesday summit could be another disappointment, an agreement on a general plan but without many specifics, and possibly without the massive “wall of money” to protect vulnerable Italy and Spain that the markets have demanded.

        In addition, a meeting of European Union finance ministers, set for Wednesday before the summit meeting, was abruptly canceled on Tuesday, largely because of continuing negotiations with banks over a reduction in the face value of Greek debt — a so-called haircut — of up to 60 percent instead of the 21 percent previously agreed to but considered grossly inadequate by most economists.

        The Europeans want the banks to agree to the losses voluntarily, to avoid a formal default that would incite unpredictable events. But the banks have negotiating capital, too, and are stretching out the talks. At the same time, officials in Brussels said, it was difficult to sign off on bank recapitalization — considered pretty much a done deal — until they were clear about the real value of the Greek debt in the banks’ portfolios.

        The Europeans also want Mr. Berlusconi to live up to his promises to do more to reduce Italy’s huge accumulated debt — about $2.65 trillion euros, or 120 percent of gross domestic product, among the highest in the developed world — and to promote economic growth in a largely stagnant economy. While Italy’s annual deficit is modest, the debt overhang means that speculation is driving up the cost of financing that debt, which if unchecked, could tear holes in the budget.

        Mrs. Merkel and Mr. Sarkozy upbraided Mr. Berlusconi on Sunday for not following through on his promises. But the sense of urgency about the fate of the euro that is building in other European capitals seems not to have arrived yet in Rome, where Mr. Berlusconi, hobbled in an internal power struggle, planned to bring only a “letter of intent” to make the kind of economic changes that his counterparts want.

        The current crisis has placed Mr. Berlusconi between two irreconcilable forces: his fellow European Union leaders and Umberto Bossi, the leader of the powerful Northern League, who holds the fate of the Berlusconi government in his hands and is bound to Mr. Berlusconi like an inoperable Siamese twin.

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2011-10-26 23:30:54
good
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2011-10-26 23:35:33
捉贼捉赃找找最最终
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2011-10-27 08:08:46
We still wait to see what will happen to Eurozone, hoping a better result!
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2011-10-27 09:41:13
谢谢分享,我每天都看,每天都可以学到新单词,非常的不错,向所有对论坛发展做出贡献的人们致敬!!!
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2011-10-27 10:49:08
rift [rɪft]
裂缝, 断裂
implore
恳求,乞求,哀求
aversion
厌恶,反感
unnerve
1. 使失去勇气;使气馁 2. 使焦躁;使失常
mobilize
1. 动员;调动 2. 使流通;使松动
fissure
裂缝,分裂
provisional
临时的,暂时性的,暂定的
patchwork
拼凑成的东西
mollify
1. 缓和;减轻 2. 使安静
Sign-Off
签署同意
overhang
(危险、灾难等)逼近;威胁
upbraid
斥责,责骂
letter of intent
合作意向书,暂定协议书

When the wave of regional integration encounters nationalism, just as what happened in Italy, the destiny of Euro is really very worrying.
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