In a special report published on Tuesday, the council of five
experts known as the "wisemen", said the Greek debt crisis had
underscored the urgent need for further reforms to make the euro
zone more stable.
Alongside measures such as deepening the European banking union, the
council said the euro area's crisis toolkit should be complemented
by a mechanism for orderly sovereign insolvencies, which would make
the currency area's no bail-out clause credible.
"To ensure the cohesion of monetary union, we have to recognize that
voters in creditor countries are not prepared to finance debtor
countries permanently," said Christoph M. Schmidt, Chairman of the
German Council of Economic
Experts.
The Greek crisis has called into question the future of the currency
bloc with popular misgivings in Germany over a third bailout for the
heavily indebted country running deep.
Such an insolvency mechanism would force creditors to bear losses if
states went bankrupt, in turn prompting investors to assess
sovereign risk in more detail, the council said.
The council recommended that an exit of a country from the euro area
should remain possible, albeit as an "utterly last resort."
"A permanently uncooperative member state should not be able to
threaten the existence of the euro," the council wrote.
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They also warned against "quick-win" policies, such as the creation
of a euro zone treasury, a European unemployment insurance scheme or
an economic government for the bloc.
"Making the euro area collectively responsible for potential costs
without member states giving up any national sovereignty over fiscal
and economic policies would - sooner or later - make the currency
union more unstable," they wrote.
Their warning came after a report in German magazine Der Spiegel
that Germany was willing to discuss the creation of a euro zone
finance minister who would have his own budget and the power to
raise extra taxes.
(Reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by Madeline Chambers)
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