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NYTQuashing recent speculation of a softening in Germany’s hard-line stance on the euro, Chancellor Angela Merkel repeated on Thursday her firm opposition either to bonds issued jointly by the euro zone countries or to an expansion of the role of the European Central Bank as quick responses to the sovereign debt crisis.
“Nothing has changed in my position,” she said at a news conference with Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti and French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Strasbourg, in eastern France.
But with signs of spreading contagion — a weak bond sale Wednesday in Germany that lifted rates there, rates on sovereign debt rising to unsustainable levels in Italy and Spain and interbank lending in Europe beginning to dry up — questions remained about just how long Germany can resist the persistent calls for action.
The German newspaper Bild reported Thursday that the Merkel government was inching towards accepting so-called eurobonds, at least in some form, even if the public stance remained against them, and that some of her party said they could be a tradeoff for treaty changes. “We aren’t saying never,” Norbert Barthle, a legislator from her coalition told journalists. “We’re just saying no eurobonds under the current conditions.”
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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/25/world/europe/merkel-rejects-rapid-action-on-the-euro.html?pagewanted=all