The Telegram (St. John's)

European Central Banker urges reforms to make euro resilient

- BY DAVID MCHUGH

The head of the European Central Bank is urging political leaders to change the way the euro is set up and pool their resources to prevent a repeat of financial crisis.

Mario Draghi said Friday in a speech in Florence, Italy, that sharing some government funds could provide “an extra layer of stabilizat­ion” for countries facing market turmoil that can’t be calmed through national budget and economic policies.

He conceded, however, the idea would be complex to enact and faces political resistance. Draghi didn’t specify what form the support might take, calling it a “fiscal instrument” without further definiatio­n.

French President Emmanuel Macron has called for EU leaders to agree at a June 28-29 summit on changes to the euro’s setup, to prevent a repeat of the 2010-2015 market turmoil that threatened to break up the 19-country eurozone. He faces skepticism from Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel, however.

Proposals for strengthen­ing the euro’s structure include the central fiscal pot as well as other financial assistance that could be triggered during a recession. Creating deposit insurance at the European Union level, for example, could help prevent bank runs from overwhelmi­ng an individual country’s finances.

Politician­s in Merkel’s conservati­ve party fear that such measures will put Germany, as the eurozone’s biggest member, on the hook for financial folly in countries such as Italy and Greece.

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