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L’Eurobond, le fantasme absolu des eurocrates, est une
option mort-née.
Même si l’on ne tient pas compte de la décision de
la Cour Constitutionnelle Allemande, la probabilité est nulle pour que
l’Autriche, la Finlande et les 17 pays concernés décident
de changer le traité pour autoriser les Eurobonds.
Cela
n’empêche par Barroso de souhaiter la possibilité pour l’Europe
de s’endetter, comme dans cet entretien à Bloomberg :
“European Commission President Jose Barroso said he is close to proposing options on joint
euro-area bond sales, putting officials in Brussels on a collision course
with Germany over steps to contain the debt crisis.
“The commission will soon present options for the introduction of euro
bonds,” Barroso told the European Parliament
in Strasbourg, France, today, prompting applause from lawmakers who have
backed the idea. “Some of these options could be implemented within the
terms of the current treaty; others would require treaty change.”
The idea of bonds sold jointly by the euro area’s 17 nations remains
alive because unprecedented bailouts by governments and the European Central
Bank have failed to stamp out debt concerns that began in Greece almost two years
ago and rattled markets in AAA rated France last month”.
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