Search for eurozone solutions
June 27, 2012
German Chancellor Angela Merkel held last-ditch talks with French President Francois Hollande late Wednesday , a day before a much-anticipated EU summit, but the German leader made it clear she had no intention of altering her opposition to pooling eurozone debt.
However, both sides highlighted their willingness to find common ground in particular areas in statements ahead of the talks in
"We both want to deepen economic, monetary- and in the future political-union, to arrive at integration and solidarity," French President Francois Hollande said, adding that the eurozone required "integration as much as necessary, solidarity as much as possible."
Merkel also expressed optimism about the prospects of the talks that will take place on Thursday.
"Significant progress has already been made regarding the growth pact," she said, referring to a plan to invest up to 130 billion euros ($162 billion) in kickstarting eurozone economic growth," Merkel said.
"We need more Europe, we need a Europe that works, the markets are expecting this, and we need a
But there was no mention of either side being ready to cede ground on key bones of contention: Hollande did not address the question of whether
"Guarantees and controls must go hand-in-hand. There can only be joint liabilities when sufficient controls have been put in place," Merkel told the German parliament ahead of the talks on Wednesday.
"Apart from the fact that instruments like eurobonds, eurobills, debt redemption schemes and much more are not compatible with the constitution in
The exchange leaves key questions about whether European leaders can find a common solution to the eurocrisis unanswered on the eve of Thursday's talks.
At the meeting in
Representatives are also anticipated to try and hammer out a strategy to more closely integrate the bloc's financial sectors.
sej/jlw (AFP, Reuters, dpa)