TI slams 'mysterious' Eurogroup
February 06, 2019 00:00:00
BRUSSELS, Feb 05 (AFP): In the depths of the debt crisis, as the single currency faced imminent doom, the Eurogroup of eurozone finance ministers emerged as one of the most crucial economic institutions in the world.
A stinging report published on Tuesday by Transparency International (TI) dissected the opaque grouping which, despite existing only informally, drew up and enforced harrowing bailout plans for Cyprus, Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain.
"For an institution whose decisions have had an impact on the lives of millions of Europeans, there is much about the Eurogroup that is mysterious," the anti-corruption NGO said in its report.
Since 1998, the Eurogroup meets once a month and is led part-time by a serving national finance minister, currently Portugal's Mario Centeno.
Before the crisis, the Eurogroup was effectively a policy "talking shop", but all that changed when the euro dream turned into a financial nightmare.
The emergency demanded tight coordination between eurozone governments as the unforgiving force of the financial markets threatened to kill the single currency project.
In a torturous series of marathon meetings between 2010 and 2013, ministers scribbled out bailouts and a new political governance for the single currency, including oversight of national spending plans.