David Charter in Luxembourg and Tony Halpin in Moscow
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Spain became the latest European country last night to announce a unilateral rescue package, while Iceland received a €4 billion loan from Russia.
Spain declared that it would guarantee all bank accounts to the tune of €100,000 (£78,000), and set up a €30 billion fund to prop up its financial system. It acted after European Union finance ministers meeting in Luxembourg rejected calls for a Europe-wide rescue fund and insisted that measures be taken in cooperation. “If there is anywhere Spaniards know their savings are safe, it’s in Spanish banks,” José Luis RodrÍguez Zapatero, the Prime Minister, said as European governments squabbled over how to protect their citizens from the turmoil.
The Spanish Government fund can be extended to up to €50 billion and will buy assets from banks to ensure they can continue lending. “The Government isn’t going to buy toxic assets, but healthy assets,” Mr Zapatero said. “The fund will buy assets from financial institutions, in a voluntary manner on their part,” he added.
At the meeting in Luxembourg, several EU states had called for a huge increase in protection for individual bank accounts across Europe, but smaller countries said that they could not afford to guarantee the proposed €100,000 for every saver. Sweden led the argument for a guarantee of €50,000, up from the threshold of €20,000 which several countries were abandoning in favour of full protection.
The Irish Republic was the first country last week to propose full protection, but only for accounts held at six Irish banks. A full national guarantee for all deposits at all banks was then offered by Greece, Germany, Denmark and Portugal.
Germany has guaranteed deposit accounts but not put that pledge into law. Angela Merkel, the Chancellor, criticised Ireland for not consulting other EU governments before taking last week’s decision. “The Irish way is not the right way,” Mrs Merkel said last night. “Protecting, without coordination, one’s own banks, without including other international institutions that paid taxes in Ireland for years, and thereby hurting competition, is in my opinion unacceptable.”
Britain announced last week a guarantee of accounts up to £50,000, up from £35,000.
Yesterday the Government of Iceland, which is in the European Economic Area but not in the EU, was forced to take over its second-largest bank, prop up the currency and seek a €4 billion loan from Russia.
Russia’s rescue of Iceland’s central bank is a cheap investment in international goodwill. There could hardly be a bigger contrast between the scale of the two countries: Iceland’s population of 300,000 would fit comfortably into a suburb of St Petersburg.
After the ruinous impact of the Geor-gia war on Russia’s image, the Kremlin needs to be seen asa goodguy.Aleksei Kudrin, Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister, adopted his best accountant’s voice in telling journalists: “Iceland is known as a country with strict budget discipline and has a high credit rating. We positively regard this request.”
With the world’s third-largest foreign currency reserves, Russia can well afford the loan. It will look strange to domestic audiences, however, after a meltdown of Moscow’s stock exchanges to lows not seen since the crash of 1998. But this is also part of the explanation. Humiliated by its pauper status then, Russia sees itself now as a potential powerhouse.
President Medvedev is also arguing this week at a conference in France for the West to take seriously his calls for new forms of international cooperation on security. That now encompass-es financial security, and Mr Medvedev has put down a marker to Europe not to leave Russia out of any new structure for resolving banking crises.
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The way to protect our oil interests in the region is to make the Georgian government understand that this kind of behaviour is unacceptable rather than propping up this criminal regime just because it is anti-Russian.
Michael, London,
Completely agree with Joe from Dublin. The British media ignored the Georgian troops shelling civilians with weapons prohibited under international law and then painted the Russian troops sent in to defend them as aggressors.
Michael, London, UK
Joe, Dublin should recognise that S. Ossetia was/is a territorial comstituent of the acknowledged Georgian state. Georgia may have been cack-handed, but it had every right to reclaim control over its own territory. As for Russia 'rightly responding', tell that to similar seccesionists in Chechnya.
Dave, Newry, Co. Down, Northern Ireland
The Russians, like most, have acted in a self-interested fashion since time began. Currently, their self-interested actions are looking far more sensible and responsible than ours!
Mike, Bristol, UK,
Look at all the folks criticising Europe - for not acting as the superstate they warned everyone of until last monday.
Not only Spain, EVERY EC member is supposed to take action to secure ITS financial institutes in coordination with the EU. That is the result of the meeting in Luxembourg.
Swen, Germany,
Sorry Joe of Dublin, I thought South Ossetia was part of Georgia!
peter wright, Horsham, UK
Joe if you researched the timeline you'd find that Russia had been preparing for such a premise for a long time. You don't get hundreds of tanks to a border overnight you know. Besides, who's side are you on? Do you have your nice Western life in Dublin thanks to the Soviets?
Mark, Glasgow, UK
Why would countries in EU like Germany; want to be in bed with UK's irresponsible lending. The highest in the EU. For example mortgages allowed in UK 125% . Germans 60%. Perhaps Gordon should ask Mandelson for his advice, as he's been known to work in this field.
A Walton, Leicester, England
Whats the old saying procrastination is the thief of time.
Well, do not knock the Irish if anyone is to blame its the British government who still have'nt grasped the nettle.
Governments are put into power to see to the best interests of the majority --joke
The Chinese do a far better job.
English dave, Beijing, China
"After the ruinous impact of the Georgia war on Russias image"?
What "ruinous impact"? Georgia invaded South Ossetia first and Russia rightly responded. Most people are aware that this was the case, despite the attempts of the US and British media to demonise the Russians.
Joe, Dublin, Ireland
Spain goes alone?
Alone, after Ireland, Germany, Portugal, Greece, Denmark....
The measures anounced in UK, at the same time as Spain, is not going alone, I suppose.
Anyway, the held a meeting in Paris and ignored us. No surprise if we decide to go alone.
david sanz, madrid, spain
I think this is the beginning and the end of the European Union. In time of crisis they can't reach an agreement to help calm things down.
dominik, london,
It seems the Irish according to European politicians are never right. For example when they voted no in the referendum they were wrong. Now they have opted for a 100% guarantee of bank deposits they are wrong once more.
Seems the Blarney Stone has moved east and found itself a new home in Brussels
Mike O Connor, Plymouth,
What is this EU thing anyway? From where I stand, it seems that every time there is a real crisis - Iraq, Afghanistan, global banking crisis etc, each country in Europe always does its own thing anyway. How on earth can there really be an EU other than in theory? I think the Brits are right.
David, Hamilton , New Zealand
The Irish way is not the right way, Mrs Merkel said.
No, we should have waited whilst the EU procrastinated on agreeing the best course of action, all the time watching our institutions go under.
Fiddle while Rome burns eh?
Dave, Tullamore, Eire