The Jerusalem Post

Merkel vows faster euro zone reform after S&P downgrades

France, Austria lose AAA ratings • Agency lowers grades of nine out of 17 euro zone countries • Italy seen as ‘problem child number one’

- (Fabrizio Bensch/reuters) • By ROBIN EMMOTT and BRIAN ROHAN

BRUSSELS/BERLIN (Reuters) – European leaders promised on Saturday to speed up plans to strengthen spending rules and get a permanent bailout fund up and running as soon as possible, a day after Standard & Poor’s cut the ratings of several euro zone countries’ creditwort­hiness.

In a conference call with reporters and analysts after downgradin­g nine of the euro zone’s 17 countries, the US ratings agency said it saw continued risks from the debt crisis that has overshadow­ed Europe for two years and said the single currency area was heading towards recession.

It also warned that France, which suffered a downgrade to AA+ from the topnotch AAA, was at risk of further cuts if a recession further inflates its debt and budget deficit.

“The policy response at the European level has in our view not kept up with the rising challenges in the euro zone,” S&P credit analyst Moritz Kraemer said on the call, forecastin­g a 40 percent chance of euro zone gross domestic product contractin­g by up to 1.5% in 2012.

The downgrades were delivered hours after talks between private bond holders and the Greek government aimed at restructur­ing Greece’s vast debts broke down, pushing Athens closer to default, an event that would tarnish euro zone unity and pose a contagion threat which could engulf the bloc.

In Germany – whose top AAA rating survived unscathed – Chancellor Angela Merkel said the downgrades underlined why a so-called “fiscal compact” must be signed by member states quickly, and the next bailout mechanism, known as the ESM, should be funded soon.

“We are now challenged to implement the fiscal compact even quicker... and to do it resolutely, not to try to soften it,” she said at a meeting of her conservati­ve Christian Democrats in the northern city of Kiel.

“We will also work particular­ly to implement the permanent stability mechanism, the ESM, so soon as possible – this is important regarding investor trust,” she added. European Central Bank policy-maker

“The proper diagnosis would have to give more weight to the rising imbalances in the euro zone in terms of the external funding positions, current account positions, much of it is based in diverging trends of competitiv­eness,” he said.

Austria, which was downgraded one notch from AAA, called S&P’S decision a wakeup call for the country to cut debt and deficits, and for Europe to move more quickly on reforms.

“The downgrade is bad news for Austria, but it should wake everyone up when such a thing happens,” Finance Minister

 ??  ?? FRENCH PRESIDENT Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel speak n Berlin last week. Germany is still rated AAA.
FRENCH PRESIDENT Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel speak n Berlin last week. Germany is still rated AAA.

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