German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her French counterpart have vowed to introduce a single eurozone budget and emergency funding as part of far-reaching reforms. They also agreed to reduce the refugee flow to Europe.
Germany and France have agreed to “open a new chapter” in European Union relations, after Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron met to finalize plans for sweeping reforms of the 19-member eurozone, including a new parallel budget.
Tuesday’s talks at Meseberg castle outside Berlin have a lot riding on them: Merkel’s political survival rests on her finding a European solution to prevent another influx of migrants to Germany, while both leaders have staked their reputation on further reworking the eurozone.
What the two leaders agreed
Read more: German economists slam Macron’s eurozone reform agenda
Budget details to be hammered out
“We are working to make sure that the eurozone budget will be used to strengthen investment, also with the aim of strengthening convergence within the eurozone,” Merkel said.
Macron added that the budget will be a “real budget with annual revenues and spending.”
Regarding migration, Merkel said it was vital that EU states are “not just working for ourselves but in the spirit of Europe.”
In reference to wider reforms to EU foreign policy and defense, Merkel said: “We want Europe to find its place in a multilateral world.” The German chancellor said the EU needed to react more speedily to world events and “we won’t always wait for absolute consensus.”
Read more: Is Emmanuel Macron Europe’s new Angela Merkel?
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