Europe sends aid to fire ravaged greece;
It sends money to aid victims trapped at the heart of euro zone crisis;
In recent days, France has also been taking to the airwaves to press for the EU to spend more on Europe’s budget as its own national accounts are failing to produce enough revenues to cover its own spending in line with the rest of Europe.
“France should make its own decisions,” French Prime Minister Manuel Valls is said to have said earlier this year in a speech to parliament on Europe’s finances.
However, some argue that for France to have a say on how Europe’s budget is being controlled, they must have a say too.
“The French have a very clear conscience when it comes to public finances. The idea that the European Union should be the ones to determine the fiscal policy of the Member States is simply wrong,” a prominent financial journalist and adviser in France, Philippe Valcke, told AFP.
Valcke said: “It would be better for France, and for the entire Euro zone economy, if France made a much cleare카지노r and more democratic decision. It is obvious that the EU has a fiscal policy, but it should never be imposed on France.”
EU-wide deficits and ‘greed’
The European Commission also said on Friday that debt relief “is not to be limited” to eurozone nations.
“For a country, even when on top of its current liabilities (of a few billion euros), this debt relief is no solution,” a commission spokesman told reporters at an annual media conference in Luxembourg.
“We need a fiscal policy with the same goals and conditions, which is to make our countries competitive again and, above all, make them sustainable.
The EU budget deficit is the largest in European history when compared with G-7 countries but has been below 3 percent of GDP for th모나코 카지노ree years running.
EU officials say there have been signs of a break in the Greek economy in the last two weeks, and that they suspect that the country’s government was involved in tax evasion.
“The truth about debt relief 더나인 카지노would be more than simple that the European Commission will see more flexibility in its strategy,” said Valcke.
However, the European Commission’s stance on debt relief was met by scepticism from members of the German government, as well as by the European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi.
He told German newspaper Welt am Sonntag: “It would be a disaster not to have it. I