French President Nicolas Sarkozy: "What has happened (in the eurozone) must never happen again"
The announcement, and austerity measures unveiled in Rome over the weekend, led to Italy's long-term borrowing rate falling below 6% on Monday afternoon - the lowest it has been since October. Mr Sarkozy said things in Europe "cannot continue as they are" and that the Franco-German wish was for "a forced march toward re-establishing confidence in the eurozone". "We are conscious of the gravity of the situation and of the responsibility that rests on our shoulders," he said.
Mrs Merkel said France and Germany were "absolutely determined" to maintain a stable euro and wanted to see "structural changes which go beyond agreements". The two leaders said the treaty changes would ideally be implemented by all 27 EU member states, but that if that was not possible, just the 17 states which have adopted the euro.
Discussions on the changes should be concluded by March "because we must move quickly", said Mr Sarkozy. The proposals include provision for automatic sanctions against any eurozone country which runs a deficit of more than 3% of GDP.
Franco-German Proposals
*Automatic sanctions for any country which runs up a deficit of more than 3% of GDP"Golden rule" *built into eurozone member's budgets against running a deficit
*Private investors never again to be asked to take losses, as in Greece*European Stability Mechanism (ESF) brought forward from 2013 to 2012, with decisions based on a qualified majority not unanimity
*Eurozone leaders to meet every month as long as crisis continues to discuss growth
These could only be overturned if a qualified majority of states voted against them. Under current rules, a majority of states must vote in favour of sanctions for them to be imposed. Eurozone states would also be obliged to include a "golden rule" in their budgets prohibiting persistently running a deficit, with the European Court of Justice verifying they had done so.
Addressing concerns about countries' sovereignty over their own budgets, Mrs Merkel said the court would only assess whether a budget showed "a real undertaking to return to a balanced budget" but would not be able to invalidate it.
The leaders also called for the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) - the 500bn-euro bailout fund due to replace the European Financial Stability Mechanism (EFSM) in 2013 - to be brought forward to 2012. Decisions on changes to the ESM should also no longer require a unanimous vote, they said, but only a qualified majority of about 85%.
They also rejected the idea of introducing single currency "eurobonds" - already ruled out by the European Central Bank - to help ease the debt crisis, with Mr Sarkozy saying they were "in no case a solution". Also ruled out was the idea of private investors being required to accept losses on eurozone bonds in the future, as happened with the Greek bailout.
Mr Sarkozy and Mrs Merkel said they wanted the heads of eurozone countries to meet for a summit every month as long as the crisis lasted, with the focus on promoting growth. "We want to have an equal Europe, a Europe on the same footing and playing field," said Mr Sarkozy. "And we do not want to make the mistakes of history where perhaps too many decisions were taken without really taking the consequences into account."
The two leaders will present their proposals to European Council president Herman van Rompuy on Wednesday ahead of a leaders' summit in Brussels on Friday. The plan is aimed at delivering one message - that the eurozone will never again allow member states to overspend and run up large deficits.
Introducing changes to the hard-fought European treaty could take many months, but analysts say that a strong, unified expression of intent on Friday could reassure markets enough to lower borrowing costs for Italy, Spain and other countries with high debt and spluttering economies. If governments cannot pay their debts - if they default - the resulting shock could bring down the banks that lend to them and create another global economic crash.
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