(It's true - paint truly does dry faster!  -- rick)

TIMELINE-European ministerial meetings in the last year

Thu Feb 2, 2012 12:14pm EST

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/02/02/eurozone-meetings-idUSL5E8D26JE20120202

Feb 2 (Reuters) - The two-year euro zone debt crisis has led to a slew of 
European Union ministerial gatherings over the last year, with another due to 
begin in Brussels on Monday.

Following is a timeline of the meetings since early 2011 and the agreements 
reached:

Feb. 4, 2011 - Summit of EU heads of state and government.

- Germany and France tried to win backing for a pact to strengthen the euro 
zone economy, but many other EU states were angered by what they saw as a fait 
accompli and the measures contained in it.

March 4 - Fourteen EU leaders, hosted by Finland, met to prepare a 
comprehensive response to the euro zone debt crisis.

- Finland said the common will was there for European leaders to agree a pact 
that would call on member states to enact national legislation on debt.

March 12

- Euro zone leaders agreed the capacity of the region's bailout fund, the 
European Financial Stability Facility, should be raised to 440 billion euros 
($600 billion) from 250 billion, but left it up to finance ministers to work 
out how.

March 15 - Meeting of EU finance ministers in Brussels.

- Euro zone officials said they were likely to agree details on how to bolster 
the EFSF soon and that the reformed facility should be operational by the 
summer.

March 24, 25 - Full summit of EU leaders in Brussels.

- They confirmed that the EFSF would have a higher effective lending capacity 
by June.

April 8, 9 - Informal meeting of European finance ministers in Hungary.

- EU finance ministers urged Portugal to commit to reforms. Portugal on April 6 
became the third euro zone country after Greece and Ireland to ask for EU and 
IMF aid.

May 16 - Euro zone finance ministers meet in Brussels.

- Ministers approved a 78 billion euro bailout for Portugal but insisted that 
Lisbon ask private bondholders to maintain their exposure to its debt.

May 17 - European Union finance ministers meet in Brussels.

- Europe's top financial officials acknowledged for the first time that Greece 
may have to restructure its debts.

June 23, 24 - Summit of EU leaders in Brussels.

- Euro zone leaders endorsed the treaty setting up the European Stability 
Mechanism (ESM) - a permanent mechanism for resolving sovereign debt crises - 
from mid-2013.

July 3 - Extraordinary meeting of euro zone finance ministers in Brussels.

- Ministers approved the next 12 billion euro instalment of Greece's bailout, 
but signalled that the nation must expect significant losses of sovereignty and 
jobs.

July 21 - Meeting of euro zone heads of state and government in Brussels.

- Euro zone leaders agreed on giving the rescue fund broader powers to prevent 
contagion from the debt crisis.

Sept. 6 - Finance ministers of the Netherlands, Finland and Germany meet in 
Berlin.

- The Dutch finance minister said talks with Finland and Germany had not 
resolved a row over a bilateral deal between Finland and Greece, granting the 
Nordic country collateral for contributing to a new Greek bailout package.

Sept. 16, 17 - Informal meeting of ministers and central bank governors in 
Wroclaw, Poland.

- EU finance ministers broke no new ground in dealing with the euro zone debt 
crisis. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner made an appearance and urged 
Germany to provide more fiscal stimulus for the euro zone.

Oct. 3 - Meeting of euro zone finance ministers, central bankers and EU 
commissioners in Luxembourg.

- European finance ministers agreed to safeguard their banks as doubts grew 
about whether a planned second bailout package for Greece would go ahead.

- Hours earlier, French-Belgian municipal lender Dexia became the first 
European bank to have to be bailed out due to the euro zone's sovereign debt 
crisis.

Oct. 23 - Meeting of EU leaders.

- Leaders near agreement on bank recapitalisation -- how to leverage their 
rescue fund to try to stop bond market contagion.

Oct. 26-27 - Euro zone leaders strike a deal with private banks and insurers 
for them to accept a 50 percent loss on their Greek government bonds as part of 
a plan to lower Greece's debt burden. The agreement is reached after more than 
eight hours of hard-nosed negotiations.

- Leaders also agree to scale up the EFSF to about 1 trillion euros and to 
recapitalise European banks to an estimated 106 billion euros ($147 billion).

Nov. 29 - Euro zone ministers meeting in Brussels.

- Ministers agree on detailed plans to leverage the EFSF but do not say by how 
much because of rapidly worsening market conditions, prompting them to look to 
the IMF.

Dec. 5 - Sarkozy and Merkel meet in France.

- They float proposal for a euro zone "fiscal compact" to enforce budget 
discipline across the 17-nation bloc. They say they want any necessary treaty 
changes for their plans to be enacted to be agreed in March and ratified after 
France wraps up presidential and legislative elections in June.

Dec. 8 - The ECB announced unprecedented action to support Europe's 
cash-starved banks with three-year liquidity tenders and easier collateral 
rules and cut interest rates back to a record low 1.0 percent.

- However ECB President Mario Draghi discouraged expectations that the bank 
would massively step up buying of government bonds if European Union leaders 
agree on moves towards closer fiscal union at a crucial Brussels summit.

Dec. 8/9 - Crisis summit of EU heads of state and government in Brussels. 
Sarkozy and Merkel laid out their plan to impose mandatory penalties on euro 
states that exceed deficit targets, to restore market trust and arrest the 
region's debt crisis.

- Twenty-three of the 27 leaders agreed to pursue tighter integration with 
stricter budget rules for the single currency area, but Britain said it could 
not accept proposed amendments to the EU treaty after failing to secure 
concessions for itself.

Jan. 30, 2012 - Summit of EU heads of state and government in Brussels. 
Twenty-five out of 27 EU states agreed to a German-inspired pact for stricter 
budget discipline - only Britain and the Czech Republic refused the fiscal 
compact, to be signed in March.

Feb. 6 - Euro zone finance ministers will meet in Brussels to try to agree a 
second financing package for Greece.


---
Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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