Financial Times: Europe’s leaders need to back shift on rules on public investment

08 October 2014

More flexibility for countries is required to promote growth, writes Mario Monti.

As European leaders meet in Milan on Wednesday [October 9] to discuss growth and employment, they should try to understand and address their divergences rather than burying them in joint declarations full of lip-service to their common determination.

Three years ago, the euro risked exploding under pressure from the markets. After considerable initial tensions, national governments – in particular those of France, Germany and Italy – worked closely together and reached landmark decisions in the European Council of June 2012.

The European Central Bank found those decisions convincing enough to justify a more accommodating stance.

By contrast today, amid quiet markets, it may be governments that are undermining the future of the euro – and the European economy as a whole. The French president, the German chancellor and the Italian prime minister arrive in Milan against a backdrop of escalating mutual recriminations. Even when couched in diplomatic terms, these reveal divergences of policy and, more deeply, of national cultures.

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