EU, IMF to lay groundwork for Irish rescue

BRUSSELS, (Reuters) – Euro zone finance ministers  agreed yesterday to lay the groundwork for bailing out  Ireland’s banking sector with the IMF, but said Dublin had to  decide itself whether to request the aid.

Before the ministers announced their decision in Brussels,  Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen resisted pressure to request a  bailout — even though the nation’s banking and budget crisis  risks spreading to other weak euro zone economies and could  endanger the stability of the wider currency bloc.

Eurogroup chairman Jean-Claude Juncker said the European  Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary  Fund would hold talks with Ireland, whose large budget deficit  is largely due to the cost of rescuing its banks.

Juncker, who chaired yesterday’s talks, vowed to protect the  stability of the 16-nation currency zone if necessary.
“The discussions that will take place between Ireland and  the Commission and the ECB and the IMF will enable us to have  at our disposal all the elements and instruments we need were  Ireland to make a request for assistance to the EU, the IMF and  the Eurogroup,” he told a news conference.

“We confirm that we will take action as the Eurogroup…in  a determined and coordinated manner to safeguard the financial  stability of the euro area if that is needed,” said Juncker.

He said the means were available to help Dublin “were  Ireland to make a request for assistance to the EU, the IMF and  the Eurogroup.”

The IMF said Irish authorities requested it take part in  the talks.
“An IMF team will participate in a short and focused  consultation, together with the European Commission and the  ECB, to determine the best way to provide any necessary support  to address market risks,” the IMF said in a statement.
Cowen said in Dublin the Irish government was fully funded  until mid-2011, and that only its banks may need help.
He also acknowledged the government was no closer to  publishing a four-year plan for tackling the budget deficit  despite its financial crisis.

“I said before that I had hoped it (the plan) would be  available for publication, assuming approval, … next week but  I can’t anticipate the outcome of discussions in relation to  it. We are working to an indicative schedule,” Cowen said.
Irish banks have grown increasingly reliant on funding from  the European Central Bank, as other commercial banks have been  reluctant to lend to them following the financial crisis in  fellow euro zone member Greece.   Bank of Ireland, the country’s largest lender, signalled  last week it had suffered a 10 billion euro outflow of deposits  from early August until the end of September.

Allied Irish Banks, which will be more than 90 percent  owned by the state following a rights issue later this year,  will issue a trading statement later this week with details  about its funding situation.

The euro fell more than a cent to below $1.3450 and  European stocks shed 2.2 percent on the day as investors  worried that the meeting would not bring a solution to  Ireland’s debt crunch.

Some ministers said before the talks that loans from EU  emergency funds could only be granted to a government that  signed a formal austerity programme with conditions set and  enforced by the European Commission and the IMF.
Before yesterday’s meeting began, European Council President  Herman Van Rompuy, who chairs EU summits, told a Brussels  think-tank the future of the 27-nation union was at stake in  the latest spasm of a debt crisis that began a year ago with  Greece.

“We are in a survival crisis,” he told the European Policy  Centre. “We all have to work together in order to survive with  the euro zone because if we don’t survive with the euro zone,  we will not survive with the European Union.”

But European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner  Olli Rehn cautioned against alarmism, saying: “It’s not a  matter of the survival of the euro.”

The ECB and some euro zone peers want Dublin to take a  quick decision on applying for aid amid signs that market  contagion is affecting fellow struggler Portugal and beginning  to hurt Spain.