Latvia, the European Union's fastest growing economy, is ready to link its currency to the euro in a two-year test period prior to adopting Europe's common currency
Published:
26 January 2005 y., Wednesday
Latvia, the European Union's fastest growing economy, is ready to link its currency to the euro in a two-year test period prior to adopting Europe's common currency, a Finance Ministry official said.
Government and central bank officials will tell a team from the European Commission, the EU's Brussels-based executive arm, that the nation can immediately join the exchange-rate mechanism, which tests currency stability before the euro switchover, said Modris Sprudzans, chief adviser to Finance Minister Oskars Sprundzins.
``Latvia is ready to participate in the mechanism and wants to do so as soon as they allow us,'' said Sprudzans in a phone interview from Riga yesterday. ``Our fiscal deficit is the smallest in six years and we're committed to slowing inflation.''
The former Soviet state of 2.4 million people is working to be the fourth of the 10 nations that joined the EU last year to enter the mechanism, following Slovenia, Estonia and Lithuania. Entry would allow it to swap the lat for the euro by 2008, completing the $11 billion economy's integration into Western Europe and reducing exchange-rate risks for companies and banks.
Hansabank Ltd., the biggest Baltic lender, expects the surge in consumer and corporate borrowing that pushed profits to records in the past two years will continue as euro adoption nears and interest rates converge. Latvia's benchmark refinancing rate is 4 percent while the European Central Bank's key rate is 2 percent.
Šaltinis:
Bloomberg
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Parex Bankas won the tender organised by UAB Investicijų ir Verslo Garantijos regarding the financing of very small, small and medium-sized enterprises, and is to lend LTL 100 million together with other three selected banks.
more »
The European Commission has approved, under EC Treaty state aid rules, the €5 billion risk shield for German bank WestLB and accompanying measures, following an in-depth investigation opened in October 2008.
more »
MEPs have backed new rules to rebuild trust in Europe's battered banks through better financial supervision and risk management.
more »
Taking into consideration the tendencies in the market, starting from 11 May this year AB Bank SNORAS will change the interest rates on time deposits in Litas, Euro, Great Britain pounds and USA dollars.
more »
Now VW and Porsche who are looking into a merger.
more »
First European SME week supports small businesses and encourages entrepreneurship.
more »
Officials at an El Paso bank said $120,000 found at an ATM doesn't belong to the bank.
more »
The placing on the market of seal products should not be allowed say MEPs. It is permitted only where the seal products result from hunts traditionally conducted by Inuit and other indigenous communities.
more »
President Barack Obama is calling on Congress to overhaul tax policies that he said reward companies for shifting U.S. jobs overseas and allow wealthy people to evade taxes using offshore accounts.
more »
MEPs will discuss the protection of animals used for science Monday evening along with a proposal to ban the trade in seal products.
more »