EU Economic Commissioner Olli Rehn has said the eurozone is taking “all neccessary action in order to overcome” the debt crisis.

He was speaking as concern over Greece and Spain lead to continued unrest across the European money markets.

On Francois Hollande’s call for an emphasis on growth rather than austerity, Mr Rehn said both were needed if Europe is to recover:

“We need… to stay the course of fiscal consolidation, and to support sustainable growth through reforms and investment.”

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18123143#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

 

Francois Hollande, Barack Obama, Angela Merkel and David Cameron, at the G8 summit, Camp David (19 May)G8 leaders maintained an amicable tone but differences on policy remain

The leaders of the G8 group of the world’s most powerful economies say they want debt-stricken Greece to remain in the eurozone.

In their summit communique, G8 leaders also committed themselves to promoting growth alongside fiscal responsibility.

However, the leaders acknowledged “the right measures are not the same for each of us”.

Greece’s possible exit from the eurozone was high on the agenda, following inconclusive elections there.

The leaders of France, Germany, the US, the UK, Italy, Japan, Canada and Russia have been meeting at Camp David in the US state of Maryland.

‘Significant headwinds’

“We agree on the importance of a strong and cohesive eurozone for global stability and recovery, and we affirm our interest in Greece remaining in the eurozone while respecting its commitments,” the statement said.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

The communique is distinctly grumpy. ‘We affirm our interest in Greece remaining in the eurozone’ is a pretty arm’s-length commitment – as lukewarm as the average moussaka”

End Quote



The global economic recovery was showing signs of progress, they said, but “significant headwinds persist”.

G8 leaders are divided on whether to continue with austerity or back stimulus measures instead.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel favours austerity, while newly elected French President Francois Hollande wants to pursue policies for greater growth, as does President Obama.

The BBC’s North America editor, Mark Mardell, says there are caveats but the first line of the communique – about promoting growth and jobs – means Presidents Obama and Hollande have won the day.

However, it is not clear that Mrs Merkel has got their message and is prepared to act on it, our correspondent adds.

US officials said Mrs Merkel would hold a one-on-one meeting with Mr Obama later on Saturday.


World leaders at G8 summit

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US President Barack Obama: “All of us are absolutely committed… to achieve the kind of prosperity for our citizens that we’re looking for”

Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti said there would be another key meeting in June in Rome, where he would host Mr Hollande and Mrs Merkel.

Earlier, UK Prime Minister David Cameron called for deficit reduction.

“There is a growing sense of urgency that action needs to be taken, contingency plans need to be put in place and the strengthening of banks, governments, firewalls and all of those things need to take place very fast,” he told reporters at Camp David.

For its part, the EU welcomed the G8 communique with its dual emphasis on boosting growth and jobs.

“Opposing the two is false debate,” said European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy in a joint statement.

The likelihood of Greece leaving the euro is growing, correspondents say.

The office of the Greek interim prime minister said on Friday that Mrs Merkel had suggested the country hold a referendum on euro membership on election day, but the German chancellor’s cabinet dismissed this as “false”.

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Greek voters will again go to the polls on 17 June after earlier elections failed to produce a viable coalition to run the country.

A caretaker government was sworn in this week after elections.

Investors fear any refusal by Athens to impose deep spending cuts agreed under a bailout deal could result in the country quitting the bloc of 17 countries that use the euro.

Two opinion polls published on Saturday showed the anti-bailout left-wing Syriza bloc neck and neck with centre-right New Democracy, both on about 25%.

Larger countries such as Spain or Italy struggling to ease their debt loads might then become vulnerable, potentially triggering wider eurozone upheaval and even a global financial crisis to rival the one of 2008.

The G8 summit has now moved on to other issues, including food security, energy and climate, partnerships in North Africa and the Middle East and the war in Afghanistan.

After the G8 summit ends on Saturday evening, most of the leaders will decamp to Chicago to join a larger group of international officials for a Nato summit on Sunday and Monday, at which Afghanistan is expected to be the main item on the agenda.

Three men arrested in Chicago on suspicion of planning to throw petrol bombs at the Nato summit have been charged with conspiracy to commit terrorism and possession of an explosive or incendiary device.

Prosecutor Anita Alvarez said the campaign headquarters of President Obama and the home of mayor Rahm Emanuel were among the targets.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-18133878#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

 

A report published by the National Audit Office into sale of Northern Rock reveals that the government is likely to lose £2bn overall by the time all the assets are wound down.

The BBC’s business editor Robert Peston says the loss is its not “what you would call a disaster for taxpayers” but he points out that it is “yet another example of how the financial crisis has imposed a burden on all of us”.


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Article source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9721000/9721889.stm#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

 

Sierra Leone’s football league resumed on Friday,

less than a week after suspending operations because of a shortage of funds.

League chairman Victor Lewis said that generosity from those close to the game has enabled the resumption.

“We are using money from friends and family members, as well as my own pocket and those of the league board as well,” Lewis told BBC Sport.

“If the money runs out and there is no further support it will be a disaster.”

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I hope some companies can come to our aid and save Sierra Leonean football

League chairman Victor Lewis

“But we hope it will not get to that point.”

Lewis revealed that Sierra Leone’s FA is also helping out a league which restarted as Old Edwardians took on FC Johansen on Friday.

However, he estimates that the funds that the league board has managed to acquire will only cover a third of the season’s remaining games.

“We are still looking out for sponsorship but we can’t sit down and just watch the days roll by,” he explained.

“The rains are coming, so we have to do something and we have to make sure we push Sierra Leonean football forward.

“The clubs want to play and the board wants the league to move on as well.”

Lewis described himself as ‘dumbfounded’ at the lack of sponsors willing to invest in the Sierra Leonean game.

Despite repeated requests to companies from the mining, banking, gambling and mobile phone sectors, the league is still without a sponsor.

“I am dumbfounded as to why they don’t want to sponsor us – but I hope some companies can come to our aid and save Sierra Leonean football,” he said.

“Somewhere along the line, maybe someone can come in and we are still calling on people from the private sector to come in.”

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/18125005

 

The Irish Football Association is preparing to help ease Glentoran’s cash flow crisis that has left players without their wages for April.

BBC Sport understands the association will provide a short-term loan, with agreement expected within days.

Unlike previous cases, it is not thought to be an advance payment of prizemoney, but instead a short-term loan that will be repaid by the club.

Meanwhile, Colin Nixon has signed a new one-year deal with the club.

The 33-year-old, who has made 772 appearances for the Glens, winning 24 trophies including four league titles, has shaken hands on a deal and is expected to put pen to paper soon.

The issue of overdue pay had caused unease in the Glens dressing room, but senior players have been assured all wages owed will be paid within the next week to 10 days.

Glens captain Colin Nixon told BBC Sport: “I have met with the chairman and vice-chairman and they have told me the situation is now under control.”

Last year, the Irish FA lent £233,000 to a number of Irish League clubs which was in effect an advance of prizemoney up to May of next year.

The Glens avoided being wound up last year thanks to a donation of around £450,000 from a mystery benefactor.

Glentoran needed that money to pay debts which included a huge tax bill.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/18115059

 

Charles GreenMr Green said he had been told of the Ticketus contract termination by the club’s administrators

Administrators at Rangers Football Club have told Ticketus they are terminating its contract over future season ticket sales, it has been claimed.

The claim was made by Charles Green, who is leading the consortium which is on track to take over the club.

London-based Ticketus are owed £26.7m from a deal struck with chairman Craig Whyte last May for the future sale of three years’ worth of season tickets.

Mr Whyte gave personal guarantees to Ticketus over capital issued to Ibrox.

Earlier this month, Ticketus formally launched legal action against him over money it was owed.

The finance firm purchased tickets from the club at the time of the businessman’s takeover last May.

Sources close to Ticketus described the apparent move to terminate the contract as “a formality” as it was already being treated as a creditor in a CVA, which implied the ticket deal would no longer stand.

It is understood Ticketus will not appeal against its termination.

Mr Green made the revelation about the Ticketus contract in a statement which followed several meetings with supporters’ representatives.

Price freeze

“My initial thoughts prior to these meetings was that season tickets prices should be increased as they had not been raised in the last three years,” he said.

“However, taking on board the fans’ concerns, I can confirm that when my consortium completes the purchase of Rangers and takes over the running of the club, season ticket prices will be frozen for next season.

“The club’s administrators have informed me they have written to Ticketus to terminate the agreement that is currently in place with the club and supporters can now take heart from the fact that season ticket sales will be as normal.”

He added: “Once we are in a position to issue season ticket renewals, and that will be as soon as possible, I would urge all fans to continue showing the tremendous support they have given to the club.”

Mr Green added that in view of the public announcement this week that the Plus Market was to close, the consortium intended to make arrangements to list Rangers Football Club on an alternative market “at the earliest opportunity”.

Sevco consortium

The English venture capitalist is leading a “worldwide consortium” which has agreed an £8.5m deal to buy Rangers.

He has said there were 20 individuals from Asia, the Middle East, Far East and the UK are involved.

And Green has revealed two of the names involved in his Sevco group: Indonesian investor Jude Allen and Mazen Houssami, a lawyer from the Middle East.

“These two are very prominent in their areas,” Green told the Rangers website.

“And in addition to these two names there is also a Singapore family trust.”

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-18119318#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

 

Spanish euro coinSpain’s PM has warned borrowing could become “astronomical” despite national banking reforms

Spain has paid sharply higher rates of interest to borrow money on the international markets, as worries grow about the state of its economy.

In total, it raised 2.5bn euros ($3.2bn; £2bn) through issuing a number of different types of bonds.

On bonds due to be paid back in January 2015, it had to pay an interest rate of 4.373%, up from 2.89% in April.

On debt maturing in April 2016, Spain had to pay an interest rate of 5.106%, up from 3.374% on 15 March.

“The auctions have gone OK, probably better than the market feared,” said Peter Chatwell, interest rate strategist at the French bank, Credit Agricole.

“The market should stabilise for the moment as this is another successful funding round from Spain,” he said.

On Wednesday, Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy warned that borrowing costs could become “astronomical”.

Banking woes

Spain is in recession and unemployment is rising. Investors are concerned about the health of its public finances and banks.

In addition there are fresh fears that contagion from Greece’s economic woes could trigger a Spanish banking crisis.

Spain’s fourth biggest lender, Bankia was rescued earlier this month and shares continued to fall on Thursday, losing another 21% of their value.

Pressure has been building on struggling European nations such Spain, Portugal and the Republic of Ireland after the political crisis in Greece deepened.

Greece is expected to hold another election on 17 June after elections earlier in May failed to produce a coalition government.

There is growing concern that the next government will refuse to continue with the austerity programme imposed on Greece by its international creditors.

If that happens then Greece would lose its last remaining sources of credit and would not be able to pay its bills, which could lead to Greece leaving the euro.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18099670#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

 

Investors looking at a model of Beijing's future skylineHome prices fell in major cities including Shanghai, Guanzhou and Beijing in April

Chinese property prices have continued to fall during April after the government kept policies in place to curb speculation.

Newly built home prices fell in 46 of 70 mainland cities in April from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

That compares with a decline in 38 cities during March.

The worry is that if property prices fall further then it will hurt growth in the world’s second-largest economy.

This fear was underlined by a Chinese government think tank on Friday which forecast that the country’s economic growth may slow to an annual rate of 7.5% on the back of a property slump.

During the first quarter of 2012, the Chinese economy grew at a pace of 8.1%.

Many investors regard 8% as a key level for Chinese growth. If it falls below that figure, they argue, the country may find it more difficult to maintain domestic demand, boost infrastructure investment and accelerate job creation.

According to the Reuters news agency, which carries out its own study of house prices in China, the cost of an average home in the mainland’s 70 major cities fell 1.2% in April, extending an 0.7% slide in March.

Last year, the Chinese government stopped providing nationwide home price statistics, and now only reports data on specific cities.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18113398#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

 

University lectureStudents will pay a maximum of £9,000 a year from this September

Plans to allow universities to charge up to £9,000 tuition fees could push public sector debt up by up to £100bn over the next 20 years, a report says.

Students at England’s universities will be able to take out government-backed loans covering the higher fees, as teaching grants are slashed from 2012.

The government insists its plans are sustainable, and predicts student loan debt will peak at £50bn in 2030.

But a study warns it could be double that.

The report by Andrew McGettigan, for the Intergenerational Foundation, analyses the impact of lending students fees to pay their loans, and allowing them to pay back once they start earning £21,000 a year.

‘National debt’

It says: “Replacing direct grants to universities with higher fees backed by higher loans reduces the relevant government department’s contribution to the deficit.

“But the cost of government borrowing adds significantly to the national debt in the short and medium term.”

The Office for Budget Responsibility estimates the loans will cost £12bn a year by 2015-16.

This is an increase of £5 to 6bn a year and “eclipses” the £3bn savings achieved through the cuts announced to the teaching grant, the report says.

This means the policy of higher student loans costs as much as twice as much a year as the annual savings from cutting teaching grants.

The debt will only be repaid when enough graduates are repaying their loans. This is predicted to be in about 2032 by the OBR or eight years later in 2040 by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

‘No protection’

And there are already concerns about the assumptions made about how many graduates will earn enough to pay back their student debts of between £30,000 and £40,000.

The government is predicting that it will get back about 70% of the money it lends out.

But the report says: “Given the amounts, the complexities of the scheme and the long lifetimes of the loans, predicting patterns and levels of repayment is extremely difficult.”

This is something acknowledged by the government as it relies on a great number of assumptions about future events, economic growth and student behaviour.

And the report points out that if repayments are not made as expected, future governments could change the terms and conditions on the loans to balance the books.

It adds that those who will have already taken out loans “have no protection” against any changes to the terms of their loans.

And it adds that future student groups will have loans offered on much less generous terms.

It also claims the government is “secretly investigating” the possibility of selling off student loan liabilities and that under present legislation this can be done without carrying out a consultation.

The author also points out that as tuition fees are included in the basket of goods used to determine the Consumer Price Index raising them to a maximum of £9,000 will have an inflationary effect.

This alone could add £2.2bn to the social security budget by 2016, because payments are linked to inflation, at a time when the Chancellor has asked for £10bn savings from this area.

A Department for Business, Innovation and Skills spokesman said: “Our reforms put students at the heart of the system and university funding on to a sustainable footing.

“While the total cash expenditure on higher education will increase due to the extra lending to students, we also expect to receive higher repayments from them as graduates.

“The net impact is that the reforms help to reduce the deficit. Our modelling of student loan repayments is scrutinised by the independent Office for Budgetary Responsibility.”

But general secretary of the UCU lecturers’ union Sally Hunt said the report confirmed that the government’s punitive budget cuts have absolutely nothing to do with reducing the national debt and everything to do with shifting the funding of higher education from the state to the individual.

“Instead of being guided by ideology and adding billions to the national debt ministers should follow the example of other countries and invest in higher education.”

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-18101729#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

 


Leaders at the G8 summit

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President Obama opened the G8 summit with a dinner for the world leaders

President Obama has welcomed world leaders to Camp David near Washington for the G8 summit, where the eurozone crisis is likely to dominate talks.

Investors fear a Greek eurozone exit could trigger a fresh global crisis.

At Friday’s opening dinner Iran and North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and Syrian unrest were discussed, with broad consensus, officials said.

North Korea faces further isolation, the G8 leaders agreed, if it “continues down the path of provocation”.

On Iran, leaders agreed that the onus was on the government in Tehran to prove the claim that its nuclear programme was peaceful.

On Syria, a US official said the leaders, including Russia’s Prime Minster Dmitry Medvedev, were in agreement that the UN-backed peace plan had yet to be fully implemented and that there was now a need to move towards a political transition.

None of these issues is simple, says the BBC’s Steve Kingstone in Washington, but Friday evening was arguably the more straightforward part of the summit.

Earlier, Mr Obama and the new French President, Francois Hollande, made it clear that they wanted a focus on economic growth.

Mr Obama said that tackling the debt crisis in Europe was an issue of extraordinary importance.

‘False’ report

Greece said that German Chancellor Angela Merkel had suggested on Friday morning that the country could hold a referendum on whether to remain in the eurozone when it votes in national elections next month.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

The new spokesman of the caretaker Greek government, Dimitris Tsiodras, told me he had nothing to add since the earlier statement that Angela Merkel had discussed the referendum proposal with the Greek president.

If Chancellor Merkel indeed suggested a referendum on euro membership, it would be an astonishing about-turn. Last November, the then Greek PM George Papandreou formally proposed a referendum – ostensibly on the bailout, but it would have turned out to be on euro membership.

The idea caused outrage from Mrs Merkel and then French President Nicolas Sarkozy, furious that the Greek government could play such a potentially dangerous game with the euro. Mr Papandreou was forced to row back on the proposal – and it ultimately cost him his premiership.

Could Mrs Merkel’s suggestion – if it stands (her office denies it was made) – be part of a high-stakes game of brinkmanship? Possibly. Berlin and others are obviously aware that the vast majority of Greeks want to stay in the euro, according to opinion polls. And they are using that fact to their advantage.

A statement from the office of Greece’s interim prime minister said that Mrs Merkel had raised the subject during a telephone call with President Karolos Papoulias.

The German chancellor “conveyed thoughts about a vote parallel to the election with the question to what extent do the Greek citizens wish to remain within the eurozone”, said the statement.

“However, it is clear that the matter is beyond the competence of the caretaker government.”

However Berlin denied such a proposal had been made.

“This is false and we completely dismiss this,” a German government spokeswoman said.

Greece’s caretaker government was sworn in this week after elections failed to produce a viable coalition to run the country. New elections have been scheduled for 17 June.

The result of the poll could determine the fate of austerity measures which Greece’s international creditors are insisting on.

Investors fear any refusal by Athens to impose deep spending cuts agreed under a bailout deal could result in the country quitting the bloc of 17 countries that use the euro.

Larger countries such as Spain or Italy that are struggling to ease their debt loads might then become vulnerable, potentially triggering wider eurozone upheaval and even a global financial crisis to rival the one of 2008.

‘Decisive action’ needed

The eurozone is expected to top the agenda when the leaders of the US, Germany, France, Britain, Japan, Russia, Italy and Canada hold a full day of talks on Saturday at their annual summit, at President Barack Obama’s retreat near Washington DC.


Francois Hollande and Barack Obama at the White House

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Francois Hollande and Barack Obama have met for the first time at the White House

Iran’s nuclear programme and Syria’s crackdown on dissent are also expected to be discussed further.

On Friday, Mr Obama welcomed Francois Hollande to the White House to discuss economic matters.

The French president, who took office this month, said he and Mr Obama shared “the same conviction that Greece must remain in the eurozone”.

Mr Obama said the situation was of great importance not only to Europe, but for the whole world.

The US president said he looked forward to “fruitful” discussions with other G8 leaders, with a strong focus on economic growth.

Mr Hollande also met British Prime Minister David Cameron at the British embassy in Washington.

Continue reading the main story

Mr Cameron said that Greece must decide if it wanted to remain in the euro.

“We need decisive action from eurozone countries in terms of strengthening eurozone banks, in terms of a strong eurozone firewall and decisive action over Greece. That has to be done.”

Meanwhile, there was another contradiction as European Union Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht said the bloc’s officials were working on contingency plans in case Greece left the eurozone.

He was contradicted by his own colleague, Economic Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn, who said in a statement: “We are not working on the scenario of a Greek exit.”

That however still does not rule out the possibility of contingency planning, says the BBC’s Matthew Price in Brussels.

After the G8 summit ends on Saturday evening, most of the leaders will decamp to Chicago to join a larger group of international officials for a Nato summit on Sunday and Monday, at which Afghanistan is expected to be the main item on the agenda.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-18126840#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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