British Govt opts to delay euro entry

Published: 8 June 2003 y., Sunday
Britain’s Government has decided the time is not yet right to join the euro, while leaving the door open to membership in the near future, newspapers said confidently today after ministers met to thrash out the issue. Citing unnamed insiders as well as comments by Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown — who will formally announce the decision next Monday — the papers said euro entry had been rejected on economic grounds at a lengthy meeting the previous afternoon. Pro-euro ministers, reckoned by some papers to be a majority in the Cabinet, had been unable to counter Brown’s arguments that five self-imposed economic tests on the benefits of euro entry have not been met, the reports said. However, in an apparent sop to Prime Minister Tony Blair, widely seen as far more pro-euro than his chancellor, the possibility had been left open for a referendum on the issue within the next few years, the reports added. The predictions hardly amount to a leap in the dark, given that pundits have said for many months that the generally euro-wary Brown had won a battle inside the Cabinet to delay entry. The Government’s hands have been largely tied anyway, given its promise to let a broadly euro-sceptic public decide the matter via a referendum before entry. The chancellor himself dropped what papers saw as a significant hint after yesterday’s gathering at Downing Street, where the decision was finally thrashed out. Blair, who is seen as having been forced to virtually cede control over the euro to his fiercely territorial chancellor, is said to have been pushing hard to leave open the possibility of a plebiscite before the next general election, due by mid-2007 at the latest.
Šaltinis: btimes.com.my
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Budget negotiations - MEPs want specific budget line for stabilisation mechanism

A specific EU budget line for the new EU stabilisation mechanism should be created as soon as possible, to ensure its credibility, Council, Commission and Parliament negotiators agreed at a three-way meeting on Wednesday. more »

Break on roaming fees for mobile phone customers

New EU rule will help phone-users avoid astronomical bills for web-surfing and downloads abroad. more »

A toolbox for stronger economic governance in Europe

The Communication approved today by the Commission builds on the principles presented on 12 May to reinforce the economic governance in the European Union. more »

Latest report on taxation trends in the EU

Eurostat report just published shows that the crisis has brought some lower taxes. more »

Food prices: new legislation needed to improve price transparency and farmers' returns

New legislation is needed to ensure fair returns to farmers and transparent prices to consumers, by enforcing fair competition throughout the food supply chain, said Agriculture Committee MEPs on Monday. more »

Fisheries: fair competition needed between imports and European producers

Fish imports play a crucial role in supplying the European market, yet fisheries and aquaculture are strategic sectors that do not lend themselves to a purely free-trade approach, believes the EP Fisheries Committee. more »

The President: Dynamic cooperation with other countries of the EU is a priority for Lithuania

I will support every proposal that strengthens cooperation among the European Union's Member States and serves Lithuania's interests," President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė said at the meeting with EU Member States' ambassadors resident in Lithuania. more »

World Lithuanian entrepreneurs are gathering in London

The fourth World Lithuanian Economic Forum “High tech innovation & investment: local to global” will start in London on 22 June. more »

Enhanced information exchange will contribute to the creation of single Baltic-Nordic community, Lithuania's Minister of Foreign Affairs says

Lithuania aims for the five Nordic countries and three Baltic States to become single community of values, which would be linked by a versatile quality of democracy, security and everyday life. more »

Parliament sets up special committee on EU budget reform

MEPs decided on Wednesday to create a special committee to prepare for the EU's next long-term budgetary framework. more »