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POLITICAL ECONOMY
China's Wen says reform key to solving EU crisis
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 21, 2011


China's Premier Wen Jiabao told the European Union president Friday that financial reforms were key to solving the eurozone debt crisis threatening the world economy.

Wen said China, the world's second-largest economy, supported EU efforts to solve the crisis after leaders of the 17-nation bloc called a second summit for next week amid persisting disagreements over how to tackle it.

"The key to solving the problem lies in fundamental institutional reforms on the fiscal and financial fronts," Wen told Herman Van Rompuy in a telephone conversation, according to an official statement.

"This needs extraordinary courage and resolution, as well as consensus between all parties."

Wen also said he hoped EU leaders would "turn political will into concrete and effective action, maintain the stability of the euro and... boost European market confidence".

Europe's struggling economies are now increasingly looking to cash-rich China -- which is investing a rising portion of its world-leading foreign exchange reserves in euro-denominated assets -- as a possible rescuer.

China, anxious about its investments in euro-denominated bonds and weakening demand for its exports, has repeatedly expressed confidence in the region and has vowed to buy European sovereign debt to shore up their flagging economies.

Chinese assistance for the eurozone was to have been high on the agenda at an annual EU-China summit that was planned for next week but has been postponed as leaders battle to find a way forward on the crisis.

The two sides had been expected to focus on the deepening crisis during the summit, with contentious issues such as human rights and the value of China's currency taking a back seat as debt-laden Europe seeks China's help.

The European Union is China's largest trade partner. Total trade between the two sides reached $480 billion in 2010, according to Chinese statistics.

EU ministers were to begin pre-summit talks Friday, amid hopes their leaders will agree to strengthen the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), Europe's financial rescue facility, and to recapitalise banks.

France and Germany have been scrambling to overcome differences over how to beef up the fund to save weak economies such as Greece as well as the likes of Italy and Spain.

The EFSF currently has a limit of 440 billion euros with which to rescue nations in trouble but would need much more if it had to throw a lifeline to strugglers such as Italy or Spain, Europe's third-and fourth-largest economies respectively.

One option under discussion is to use the cash as insurance for investors facing possible losses on their holdings of bonds issued by weaker member states, but there are deep divisions over the best solution.

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Eurozone crisis delays China-EU talks
Brussels (AFP) Oct 21, 2011 - An annual meeting between Chinese and European leaders has been postponed after eurozone leaders said they would hold a second round of crisis talks by Wednesday, the EU said Friday.

"Due to the upcoming meetings of the European Council and the heads of state and government of the eurozone countries, the EU-China Summit has been rescheduled to a later date," the bloc said in a statement.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao was due to meet with president of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso and European Union President Herman Van Rompuy in the northern Chinese port city of Tianjin on Tuesday.

But rifts between EU nations over how to solve the region's debt crisis have forced the 17-nation bloc to call a fresh summit next week, following a marathon weekend of meetings already in Brussels.

After vowing decisive action to their G20 partners, wrangling between Paris, Berlin and others has prompted the need for a further round of talks.

Van Rompuy talked with Wen by telephone and the two agreed to soon find a new date for their meeting, the EU statement said.

The plight of struggling European economies was expected to dominate the annual talks between China and the EU, which is increasingly looking to the cash-rich Asian powerhouse as a possible rescuer.

Both sides were also expected to push forward an investment agreement aimed at boosting market access.



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