By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
The German scheme -- known as the European Redemption Pact -- offers a form of "Eurobonds
Lite" that can be squared with the German constitution and breaks the
political logjam. It is a highly creative way out of the debt crisis, but is
not a soft option for Italy, Spain, Portugal, and other states in trouble.
The plan is drafted by the German Council of Economic Experts and inspired by
Alexander Hamilton’s Sinking Fund in the United States -- created in 1790 to
clean up the morass of debts left by the Revolutionary War. Flourishing
Virginia was comparable to Germany today.
Chancellor Angela Merkel shot down the proposals last November as "completely
impossible", but Europe’s crisis has since festered, and her Christian
Democrat party has since suffered crushing defeats in regional elections.
The Social Democrat opposition supports the idea. The Greens say they will
block ratification of the EU Fiscal Compact in the German Bundesrat -- or
upper house -- unless Mrs Merkel relents.
"The Redemption Pact cleverly combines the advantages of lower interest
rates through joint European borrowing with a reduction of debt," says
Green leader Jürgen Trittin. "Joint liability would be limited in
both time and scale."
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