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ITALY Mario Monti is in a race against the clock. Italy's unelected premier and his technocratic government, appointed by Parliament last November to put the eurozone's third-largest economy back on a path to fiscal health, have until next spring to conclude their task. Elections are scheduled for the first half of the year
-- most likely, April -- after which Monti's team hands over power to the new government. After a short period of calm at the beginning of the year -- when Monti took over and the ECB flooded the market with euro1 trillion in cheap loans that banks used to buy government debt
-- Italian borrowing rates have been climbing amid market uncertainty about the wider eurozone and Italy's high debt load. The ECB and Draghi also had Italy in mind when they were drawing up plans to help bring down countries' borrowing costs. The Bank of Italy said national debt reached a record euro1.972 trillion in June, up from euro1.966 trillion the previous month
-- that's 123 percent of the country's gross domestic product. The government says its priority immediately after the summer break is reducing the stock of public debt and pruning public sector waste. Monti's measures have antagonized many. In his attempts to break down barriers to entry for certain professions that he claims are stifling economic growth, he has taken on powerful lobbies. They include such professions as bakers, taxi drivers, pharmacists, lawyers, notaries, railroad workers and newsstand dealers.
On top of this, some of the parties in the Italian Parliament -- in particular former premier Silvio Berlusconi's People of Freedom Party
-- have brought up the possibility of early elections. Any hint that Italy's chronic political instability could return would worsen its standing with investors. GERMANY Leaders of the eurozone hope their plans for a euro500 billion permanent bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, will be the antidote to their financial problems. Germany
-- the eurozone's biggest economy and therefore the biggest contributor to the fund
-- was one of the main architects of the new fund and the fiscal stability pact, a treaty that lays down strict budget rules. The ESM and the pact need to be ratified by the 17 eurozone countries. Several leaders and politicians from the bloc's economically sounder members
-- such as Germany, the Netherlands and Finland -- have been showing worsening symptoms of "bailout fatigue" with repeated calls for the rescues to stop. German dissenters have filed complaints at the country's highest court, which is to rule Sept. 12 on whether it should issue an injunction to delay the ESM's introduction so it can decide whether the fund interferes with Germany's sovereignty. If it chooses to issue the injunction Europe's grand plan for recovery could easily be scuppered. "A significant postponement of the setup of the ESM ... could mean a serious unsettling of markets far beyond Germany and a serious loss of confidence in the eurozone," Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble warned the court's panel of eight judges. PORTUGAL Inspectors from the troika, who granted Portugal a euro78 billion bailout last year, are due back in Lisbon on Aug. 28 to review how well the country is managing its economy. They will encounter a country that is enduring deep hardship and is likely to need more help. The coalition government has won praise for sticking to the terms of the financial rescue agreement signed in May 2011. It has introduced deep spending cuts and adopted key economic reforms. But the government forecasts an economic contraction of 3 percent in 2012, bringing a third recession in four years, and unemployment has risen to a record 15.2 percent. Opposition parties and trade unions say austerity is to blame. Bailout lenders may have to grant Portugal more time -- perhaps an extra year
-- to meet its debt targets. FRANCE Investors will be keenly watching France -the eurozone's second-largest economy
-- from September when the country's new Socialist government unveils its 2013 spending plans. President Francois Hollande has pledged to cut the deficit from its current 5.2 percent of GDP to 3 percent. But it won't be easy: an independent audit of the country's finances says Hollande will have to find an extra euro33 billion if he's going to keep that promise
-- and that's assuming 1 percent growth next year. Government statistics show the economy was stagnant in the second quarter, the third straight quarter it hasn't grown. So far the government has decided not to cut spending to reach the deficit goal
-- opting instead to raises taxes on the higher earners and rolling back some of the labor reforms of the previous Sarkozy administration. Markets are worried that France's new government has not fully recognized the extent of its problems.
[Associated
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