GERMANY: Both the German lower and upper houses of parliament approve a 500 billion euro bank rescue package
Record ID:
327576
GERMANY: Both the German lower and upper houses of parliament approve a 500 billion euro bank rescue package
- Title: GERMANY: Both the German lower and upper houses of parliament approve a 500 billion euro bank rescue package
- Date: 18th October 2008
- Summary: (BN10) BERLIN, GERMANY (OCTOBER 17, 2008) (REUTERS) WIDE VIEW OF MPs VOTING EXTERIOR VIEW OF GERMAN UPPER HOUSE OF PARLIAMENT, THE BUNDESRAT USHER TAKING DRAFT LAW INTO UPPER HOUSE OF PARLIAMENT FROM THE LOWER HOUSE ARRIVAL OF GERMAN FINANCE MINISTER, PEER STEINBRUECK CLOSE-UP OF STEINBRUECK WIDE VIEW OF CHAMBER MINISTERS STEINBRUECK TALKING MINISTER LISTENING (SOUNDBITE) (German) GERMAN FINANCE MINISTER, PEER STEINBRUECK, SAYING: "I would like to say that in some judgements we may have been wrong and our timing was perhaps not perfect, but you can only make a judgement based on the information you have at the time. And I maintain that the scope of this financial market crisis was not clear until deep into August or September." MINISTERS BEING ASKED TO VOTE FOR THE LAW AND VOTING WITH THEIR HANDS IN THE AIR MINISTERS LEAVING THE ROOM AFTER THE VOTE IS ANNOUNCED AS HAVING BEEN PASSED USHER TAKING LAW OUT OF THE CHAMBER
- Embargoed: 2nd November 2008 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Germany
- Country: Germany
- Topics: Finance
- Reuters ID: LVA2QPJYAOV0PNMYKXXT9WWVQFNT
- Story Text: German lawmakers approved a 500 billion euro ($673.8 billion U.S.
dollar) bank rescue package on Friday (October 17) that Chancellor Angela Merkel hopes will restore confidence in a shaken financial system.
Both the Bundesrat upper house of parliament and the Bundestag lower house voted in support of the package. President Horst Koehler was expected to sign the plan into law later on Friday, after which it will come into effect on Monday (October 20).
Speaking in the Bundesrat, Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said the package aimed to restore liquidity to the banking system that is essential for the proper functioning of the economy and defended his government's handling of the crisis.
Germany had initially pledged help for banks on a case-by-case basis but changed course and decided to adopt a sector-wide plan after the financial crisis worsened.
"In some judgements we may have been wrong and our timing was perhaps not perfect, but you can only make a judgement based on the information you have at the time," Steinbrueck said.
"And I maintain that the scope of this financial market crisis was not clear until deep into August or September," he added.
The German package mirrors those in other European states after an agreement at a euro-zone leaders' summit on Sunday (October 5) to proceed with coordinated national plans.
Although approval in the Bundestag was widely expected given the substantial majority the ruling parties have in the chamber, the government was forced to strike a compromise with Germany's 16 states to ensure their support in the Bundesrat.
Under a deal struck on Thursday (October 16) with the states, the federal government would take on 65 percent of the cost of losses arising from the package, and the states 35 percent. The cost to the states would be capped at 7.7 billion euros.
The package comprises up to 400 billion euros in bank guarantees to restore liquidity and as much as 100 billion euros in state funds for recapitalising struggling financial institutions -- sums that together almost equal Germany's annual tax take.
No German bank has signalled publicly yet that it intends to make use of the funds. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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