Nikolia
Apostolou and Sumi Somaskanda Special for USA TODAY
European
leaders meet to discuss fiscal unity amid disagreement over how to achieve it
and protests over budget cuts in Greece .
5:17PM EDT
October 18. 2012 - BERLIN — Tens of thousands of Greek protesters clashed in
the streets Thursday as European leaders met in Brussels to consider German
plans for tighter fiscal unity that would give the European Union power to veto
budgets of debtor nations if they don't cut spending enough.
"We're
protesting against the harsh inhumane austerity measures that are going to be
voted on in parliament," said Ira Diamantidi, 51, a teacher in Athens . "We're
living in complete terror."
The Greek
government is currently in the process of negotiating a new $17.7 billion package
of spending cuts and tax hikes — so-called austerity measures — to qualify for
continued loans from their richer European neighbors and avoid bankruptcy.
PHOTOS:
Violent protests in Greece
The cuts
hit pensions and health care services, which is angering many public unions and
ordinary Greeks, and they come as EU leaders are in Brussels to figure out how to tighten
oversight of debtor nations.
A proposal
unveiled by German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble
ahead of
the conference would give the European Commission – the executive branch of the
EU – power to oversee the budgets of individual countries.
All of the
members of the eurozone, or the 17 nations that use the euro as currency, would
have to agree to add such powers. There is a question about whether the
non-eurozone members of the EU, such as Britain , would have to approve the
change.
But the
heads of some nations such as France
have criticized what they see an attempt to force EU countries to surrender
national sovereignty.
"It
would involve countries handing over to an unelected appointed figures the
right
to veto
their budgets, so in terms of the implications for democratic accountability
it's certainly very radical," said Simon Tilford, chief economist at the
Center for European Reform in London .
Adding to
the bickering at the summit, Denmark
and Sweden
joined forces Thursday to demand banks take more responsibility than required
today for loans given to nations now mired in debt.
Both
nations said it was unfair for taxpayers alone to provide cash bailouts to
indebted governments to pay off bank loans that should never have been made.
They said any new regulatory system should require banks to take greater
losses.
European
leaders reached agreement Thursday on creating a single supervisor
for banks
in the countries that use the euro to be up and running sometime next
year. The
deal represents a compromise between the Germans and French,
who had
been tussling over how best shore up stricken banks — one of the main
causes of
the Europe 's financial crisis.
In some
cases, like Ireland ,
failing banks have dragged the governments that tried to save them into
bankruptcy. Some fear Spain
faces the same fate.
In Athens , public transportation ground to a halt in Athens as 70,000 Greeks,
many of whom walked off their jobs at schools, hospitals, airports and public
transport, marched in the streets.
Under
pressure from European leaders, the Greek government has already made
significant cuts to public spending and raised taxes as unemployment has soared
to more than 25% and the economy continues to contract. That is why many
nations are complaining that Schaeuble's proposal, if adopted, would simply
intensify the crisis for Europe 's struggling
economies.
"The
German assumption is that countries are missing their fiscal target because
they're not trying hard enough," said Tilford. "That sort of misses
the underlying reason why governments are struggling to reduce their deficits,
which is that tax revenue is falling – in some cases very sharply. Tightening
or cutting public spending more when tax revenue is already falling because of
weak demand is only going to make things worse."
Many are
also wary of increasing Brussels '
control over EU member states. In December, the United Kingdom opted out of plans
for a fiscal pact that would bring European budgets in line and are not
expected to react any differently this time around, economists say.
Carsten
Brzeski, a senior economist at ING in Brussels ,
says that even the 17 eurozone member states are unlikely to agree to the
proposal, at least at first, "because it really interferes with national
sovereignty and there are countries like France (which) do not really like
strong European institutions."
With
Europeans continuing to struggle to find common ground on such key issues,
analysts say Thursday's summit is unlikely to produce any concrete resolutions.
But some believe that Schaeuble's drastic integration plans will need to be put
in place sooner or later.
"The
charm of the proposal is that it now clearly shows how radical the solution
probably has to be," Brzeski said. "The typical crisis management
approach is always piecemeal, which means that the general public usually loses
sight of what's happening.
"But
this is something people understand – it's something you can explain to
voters."
Contributing:
The Associated Press
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