Europaudvalget 2010-11 (1. samling)
EUU Alm.del Bilag 113
Offentligt
28 November 2010
Statement by the Eurogroup
The recent events have demonstrated that financial distress in one Member State can
rapidly threaten macro-financial stability of the EU as a whole through various
contagion channels. This is particularly true for the euro area where the economies,
and the financial sectors in particular, are closely intertwined.
Throughout the current crisis, euro area Member States have demonstrated their
determination to take decisive and coordinated action to safeguard financial stability in
the euro area as a whole, if needed and return growth to a sustainable path.
In particular, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) has been set up to
provide for swift and effective liquidity assistance, together with the European
Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM) and the International Monetary Fund, and
on the basis of stringent programmes of economic and fiscal policy adjustments to be
implemented by the affected Member State and ensuring debt sustainability.
On 28 - 29 October the European Council agreed on the need to set up a permanent
crisis mechanism to safeguard the financial stability of the euro area as a whole.
Eurogroup Ministers agreed that this European Stability Mechanism (ESM) will be
based on the European Financial Stability Facility capable of providing financial
assistance packages to euro area Member States under strict conditionality functioning
according to the rules of the current EFSF.
The ESM will complement the new framework of reinforced economic governance,
aiming at an effective and rigorous economic surveillance, which will focus on
prevention and will substantially reduce the probability of a crisis arising in the future.
1