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

Many countries, one market

New rules for the EU's single market will make it easier to live and do business anywhere in Europe. more »

EU budget review – MEPs welcome new ideas but miss real revision

MEPs were disappointed that the Commission's EU budget review document had not sought the radical revision that the EU needs, they told Budgets Commissioner Janusz Lewandowski in a Policy Challenges Committee debate on Thursday. more »

The European Commission grants € 9.5 million to support the electoral process in the Central African Republic

On 25 October, the Commission adopted the decision to financially support the 2011 electoral process in the Central African Republic. more »

Crisis management in the banking sector

New EU framework for crisis management in the financial sector for managing problems before they spiral out of control. more »

Out of the crisis and towards European economic governance

The financial crisis laid bare the limits of self-regulation, demonstrating the need for strong EU economic governance, surveillance and policy co-ordination, say two non-legislative resolutions voted by Parliament on Wednesday. more »

1 181 former workers of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG to get help worth €8.3 million from EU Globalisation Fund

The European Commission has approved an application from Germany for assistance from the European Globalisation adjustment Fund (EGF). more »

Taxing the financial sector

Global and EU- level taxes on financial sector would help to fund international challenges such as development or climate change and fix the fallout from the global economic crisis. more »

EIB and African Development Bank finance first large-scale wind farm in Africa

The European Investment Bank and African Development Bank today agreed to provide EUR 45m to design, build and operate onshore wind farms on four islands in the Cape Verde archipelago. more »

2011 budget - MEPs make room for new policy priorities

MEPs want future EU budgets to accommodate new policy priorities as well as negotiations on new sources of financing. more »

Globalisation Fund: Budgets Committee backs aid to Portugal, the Netherlands, Spain and Denmark

The European Parliament's Budgets Committee on Monday backed EU funding for 3,731 workers in Portugal, the Netherlands, Spain and Denmark who were made redundant due to the closure of their companies. more »