It could all be over by the New Year... Germany's finance minister
Wolfgang Schaeuble says next month's EU summit will calm jittery markets and offer a rapid solution to the eurozone crisis. In particular he believes that changes to European treaties to institutionalize budgetary discipline will be forthcoming.
It's going to be quicker than 12 months. I think decisions will be made on December 9. There's no alternative. We must change the structures. It's not the arrogance of the Germans, that's just the way it is. The rift between France and Germany over the issue of the ECB's role in solving the debt crisis is widening. Although
Angela Merkel disagrees, French Prime Minister
Francois Fillon said today that it should start buying up more eurozone bonds:
We still face a major difficulty, which is to convince Germany that we must give the eurozone a defense tool for our currency through a certain evolution of the central bank's role. Staying in France, the head of the agency that manages government debt,
Philippe Mills, acknowledged that the country isn't in the best position compared with other eurozone countries that it shares a AAA rating with:
I recognize that based on the criteria of public finances that France isn't in the best position compared to the other AAA countries in the eurozone, even if the responsiveness of the government has been welcomed by the (ratings) agencies and investors....AND... MY SUBJECTIVE OPINION ON "UBER ALLES" NOW : Post-war German politics has always been founded on consensus so hardly surprising you get successive generations of German politicians who are exceptional only in their dullness and mediocrity: Kohl, the last 'great' chancellor was as dull as ditchwater; Schröder was laughed off as a 'used car salesman'. Only Willy Brandt - a bit of a showboater - and Helmut Schmidt rose above the rest in terms of vision and intellect, but they didn't last long. Germans like their politicians dull and boring, unadventurous and unambitious. The current crop of German politicians is even more miserable: Westerwelle, Rösler, Steinmeier, Ude, who of them could do a better job than Merkel? The one guy who might have made broken the pattern - Guttenberg - has disappeared off to the US after the plagiarism scandal. For a Europe crying out for leadership Germany is indeed a problem.