Monday, May 22nd., 2017 German, French finance ministers vow to strengthen eurozone
Monday, May 22nd., 2017
German, French finance ministers vow to strengthen eurozone
Mon May 22, 2017 2:2PM
German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble (L) and his French counterpart Bruno
Le Maire attend a joint press conference in Berlin on May 22, 2017.
(Photo by AFP)
Germany and France, two
leading economic powers in the European Union, have vowed to double
their efforts to strengthen the eurozone.
German Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble and his French counterpart Bruno Le Maire
said Monday after a meeting in Berlin that they would set up a working
group to pave the way for reforms in the eurozone.
Le Maire,
making his first visit to Berlin since the election of Emmanuel Macron
as French President, said there was a need for the eurozone members to
accelerate the integration process.
"We've been talking for years
about progress in the integration of the eurozone, but things aren't
advancing quickly enough or far enough," he said, adding, "We are
determined to get things moving faster and further, in a very concrete
way." The
new French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire attends a joint press
conference with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble (not in
picture) in Berlin on May 22, 2017. (Photo by AFP)A
joint statement issued at the end of the meeting said a panel would be
set up to work out how the eurozone could coordinate economic policies
and harmonize its tax regime. The statement also noted that France and
Germany would seek better opportunities for joint investment projects. A
joint ministerial meeting between the two countries would review ideas
by the working group in July.
On the issue of corporate tax,
Schaeuble and Le Maire said they would either push for a harmonized
assessment basis for corporate tax at the European Union level or they
would establish their own corporate tax system.
Schaeuble conceded
that both plans were “ambitious” although he said that wider tax
harmonization was difficult as it would require consensus among EU
leaders.
During the meeting, Le Maire also proposed creating a
finance minister for the 19-nation eurozone or a "European monetary
fund." Schaeuble has also backed the idea several times.
The two
ministers reiterated that Germany and France should take the “leading
role” in strengthening the European Union in challenging times.
The
pledge to strengthen the eurozone comes as Britain, another key
economic power within the EU, has started the process for leaving the
bloc.
Le Maire, however, urged the EU states to capitalize on Brexit and try to reap benefits from it.
"We
see in Brexit an opportunity for our financial companies to be more
attractive than they were before," Le Maire said, adding, "Our role is
to create wealth for our country, to create jobs for our country. With
Brexit, there is this opportunity, and we expect to seize this
opportunity."