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There will have to be "one fully fledged program," said Rehn. Eurozone governments are already locked in a fight with Ireland's newly elected leadership about changing that country's bailout agreement
-- sealed only in November. Ireland's Finance Minister Michael Noonan said he wanted to talk to his German and French colleagues about lower interest rates for the country's euro67.5 billion bailout, but added that with Portugal likely to dominate the meeting Friday and Saturday, he did not expect a deal. Greece, the eurozone's first country to need a rescue last May, had its interest late lowered in March. However Dublin has refused to budge on its super-low corporate tax rate, angering some of the currency union's bigger members who believe the Irish tax regime is stealing business away from them.
Eurozone ministers said they were confident that a rescue for Portugal would finally draw a line under the debt crisis that has crippled the region for more than a year now. Spanish Finance Minister Elena Salgado said it was "completely out of the question" that her country, seen by many as the eurozone's next most vulnerable member, would need international help, too. "Our economy is much bigger, we have a much more diversified economy, we have a much better track record and we are in the middle of big structural reforms and we have a big and strong commitment to the reducing of our deficit," she said. "We have been successful in that and the future ahead is much better."
[Associated
Press;
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