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Currency tops EU summit agenda

Tony Barber Europe Editor
Saturday 09 December 1995 00:02 GMT
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TONY BARBER

Europe Editor

Prospects for launching a single currency in 1999 will preoccupy European Union leaders next week as they prepare for a summit of heads of state and government in Madrid.

The meeting, which is the climax of Spain's six-month EU presidency, is expected to agree a name for the single currency, and define the steps by which the EU will move to monetary union in the next three years.

The leaders are also due to discuss bringing into the EU the former Communist countries in Central and Eastern Europe, and preparations for next year's Inter-Governmental Conference on reforming EU institutions. In what looked like a coded message to Britain, President Jacques Chirac of France and Chancellor Helmut Kohl of Germany proposed in Baden-Baden on Thursday that no country should be free to veto closer EU integration if other member states wish to press ahead.

The proposal was more a restatement of the existing Franco-German position than an initiative, and it fell short of calls by Germany's ruling Christian Democrats last year for a "hard core" of EU states committed to deeper integration. The Baden-Baden meeting did not produce a demand for more extensive powers for the European Parliament. Instead, in a German concession to French doubts about giving the legislature too much authority, Mr Kohl and Mr Chirac referred only to the need to "bind the European Parliament and national parliaments more than hitherto into the process of European integration".

Nevertheless, the two leaders reaffirmed their belief in extending the use of qualified majority-voting in EU decision-making, a point on which they have little common ground with John Major's government.

They also called for a common policy on asylum and immigration, an idea that does not appeal to Britain and may prove difficult to implement in the light of French concerns about the Schengen agreement on abolishing internal EU frontiers.

Far from using the summit to discuss whether 1999 remains a realistic date for launching monetary union, EU leaders intend to settle the question of the single currency's name.

The outcome may cast light on the relative weight of Germany, France, and the Commission in the monetary union debate.

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