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*Italy accepts IMF monitoring in bid to rebuild... *

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/04/us-g-idUSTRE7A20E920111104

Reuters) - Italy will allow the IMF to monitor its progress with long
overdue reforms of pensions, labor markets and privatizations, European
leaders announced on Friday, looking beyond the crisis in Greece to the far
graver threat to the euro zone.

With its borrowing costs rising and debt levels stuck at 120 percent of
GDP, the euro zone's third largest economy is too big to fail. Paralysis in
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's weakened government has sapped market
confidence.

Berlusconi agreed in late-night talks with euro
zone<http://www.reuters.com/subjects/euro-zone>leaders and U.S.
President Barack Obama on the sidelines of a G20 summit in
Cannes to have the IMF and the EU issue quarterly reports assessing its
performance on reform promises.

The move came after a European ultimatum forced
Greece<http://www.reuters.com/places/greece>to step back from a
referendum that could have triggered its exit from the
euro and agree instead to seek national consensus to drive through
austerity measures.

Discussions with Italy <http://www.reuters.com/places/italy> went more
smoothly, European diplomats said. Berlusconi understood the gravity of the
situation and was thoroughly engaged in the talks.

"I see this as evidence of how important Italy's reform process is for the
country and for the euro zone as a whole," European Commission President
Jose Manuel Barroso said.

The Commission too will monitor Italy and will conduct a first assessment
next week. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the two bodies would
produce quarterly reports.

The International Monetary Fund's intervention in Italy, a G8 economy,
takes the euro zone debt crisis to a new level. To varying degrees bailout
recipients Greece, Portugal,
Ireland<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/04/places/ireland>and
now Italy are relinquishing sole control of economic policy.

"We need to make sure there is credibility with Italy's targets -- that it
is going to meet them." one EU source said.

Concern is growing that Italy, the euro area's biggest government bond
market, could go the way of Greece without rapid action. Berlusconi has
repeatedly promised to make deep reforms, balance the budget in 2013 and
trim the public debt, but there are doubts about his commitment.

NO NEW CASH FOR EFSF

The leaders of France, Germany <http://www.reuters.com/places/germany>,
Italy, Spain, the European Central Bank, the IMF and European Union
institutions also discussed with Obama ways of ramping up the IMF's
warchest to help prevent contagion from the euro zone's debt crisis
plunging the world economy back into recession.

The shift of focus to the IMF was a tacit admission that Europe's G20
partners had little stomach to invest in Europe's bailout fund.

Merkel said "hardly any countries in the G20" had shown willingness to
participate. The Europeans had hoped to entice
China<http://www.reuters.com/places/china>and other wealthy sovereigns
to invest in a special purpose vehicle, but
their leaders said they needed more detail on how the system would work
before deciding.

No figures were agreed on the IMF but the boost to resources, mostly from
large emerging countries such as China, could be in the range of $300-350
billion, G20 officials said.

Sarkozy said G20 finance <http://www.reuters.com/finance> ministers were
instructed to take forward several options for scaling up the Fund's
resources.

EU officials said three options were under consideration, including pooling
the euro zone countries' rights to borrow from the IMF to build a fighting
fund to support vulnerable sovereigns such as Italy and Spain. This could
make available another $280-300 billion, the G20 source said.

BEYOND GREEK DRAMA

Delegates gathered in the Riviera resort found themselves watching the euro
zone battle to snuff out its biggest fire yet as Greece seemed on the brink
of quitting the euro.

An EU source said a precautionary credit line was not seen as a credible
option for Italy, where one of the main problems has been market confidence.

"With the general climate and Italy's lack of credibility, every small
setback or problem is compounded and makes things worse, so the markets
cannot have confidence," he said.

Greece's future in the euro zone may hinge on a vote of confidence in
Socialist Prime Minister George Papandreou late on Friday night.

If he wins, government sources say he has pledged to step aside and make
way for an interim national unity government that would enact the EU/IMF
bailout plan, receive a vital aid installment and pave the way for early
elections next year.

However, if he loses, Greece will be plunged into deeper political turmoil
and may face a hard default and possible exit from the 17-nation single
currency area.

SARKOZY AMBITIONS OVERTAKEN

The fast-moving Greek fiasco dominated the last meeting of France's G20
presidency and crushed any hopes by President Nicolas Sarkozy of making a
last-minute breakthrough on big early goals such as rethinking the global
monetary system.

The draft statement seen by Reuters showed the G20 is considering an IMF
proposal to create a new short-term credit line to help countries hit by
crippling economic shocks.

G20 sources said talks were looking at an extension of the fund's New
Agreements to Borrow (NABS), due to expire next year, and the injection of
billions of dollars into the global economy through a special allocation of
its Special Drawing Rights.

"It all depends on Sarkozy, how hard he pushes," one said.

The plan to ramp up SDRs should also help manage fears rippling through
markets over Europe's crisis.

"The crisis in Europe is causing a global systemic crisis including Asia.
Rather than creating a new global framework, everyone is expecting the IMF
to become more proactive," Japanese Finance Minister Jun Azumi said.

"The focus of debate is how to set up a firewall but we consider that the
IMF should become one big wall."

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