March 15, 2025

Venezuela to Quit World Bank Arbitration Body

Mr. Ramírez also announced that Venezuela would seek to renegotiate dozens of international investment-related agreements.

“We do not accept impositions and we are going to rescue our national sovereignty,” Mr. Ramírez said in a televised interview.

Mr. Ramírez said disputes with foreign companies, including an unsettled disagreement with Exxon Mobil, would be heard by Venezuelan judges — not international forums like the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes, based in Washington.

“We are going to send notification of our withdrawal” from the center, Mr. Ramírez said.

Venezuela’s decision to leave would affect more than a dozen foreign companies that have unsettled disputes. The forum’s Web site lists 17 pending cases against Venezuela.

Mr. Ramírez recently said Venezuela did not intend to make any payments to Exxon Mobil beyond about $255 million that it agreed to in a recent arbitration.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=dae522241d2466a83d1b010b46e94c57

Britain Isolated After Vetoing Euro Zone Pact

In marathon negotiations, European leaders agreed early Friday on a package of measures that would enforce greater fiscal discipline among member countries but at the expense of ceding some sovereignty over financial matters. They had hoped to gain approval from all 27 members of the European Union but after Mr. Cameron’s veto, had to restrict the agreement to the 17 members of the euro zone.

Mr. Cameron was asking for an exemption for Britain’s vital financial services industry from future regulations that might hurt its competitiveness. After he was rebuffed, he said he had no choice but to exercise his veto. Given the virulent anti-European mood in his Conservative Party back home, many here seemed to agree.

William Hague, the British foreign secretary, called Mr. Cameron’s step “very sensible,” and said that anything else would have meant a loss of national sovereignty. The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, also supported the move and said “David Cameron has played a blinder, and he’s done the only thing that it was really open for him to do.”

If anything, some Conservatives are saying that Mr. Cameron should go further and reconsider Britain’s entire relationship to — and even its membership in, the European Union. Among them is lawmaker David Nuttall who repeatedly warned that Britain was “increasingly become run by Europe.”

For its part, the Labour opposition wasted no time in attacking Mr. Cameron for, it said, leaving Britain isolated and vulnerable at a critical time.

“This is the most important European summit for a generation, and its outcome is looking increasingly worrying for the U.K.,” Ed Miliband, the Labour leader, said.

Writing in the Evening Standard, he said that Mr. Cameron “had been on the sidelines” of the debate for months. “He has been hamstrung by the divisions in his own party, imprisoned by the Euroskeptics and his failure to confront his party over the last five years,” Mr. Miliband added. “If you get out of the deal-making room as he has done over the last year, you end up losing influence.”

The decision also risks alienating many members of the Liberal Democrat party, the Conservatives’ partner in the coalition government and the most pro-Europe of Britain’s three major parties. While the country’s top Liberal Democrat, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, said that he had fully supported Mr. Cameron’s veto, other senior party members were not happy at all.

“Far from keeping Britain strong, Cameron has ensured that we will lose our influence at the top table,” said Chris Davies, a Liberal Democrat member of the European Parliament. In trying to “protect bankers from regulation,” he added, Mr. Cameron had “betrayed Britain’s real interests and done nothing in practice to help the City of London.”

Bob Penn, a partner at the law firm of Allen Overy, said Mr. Cameron had “been politically boxed in by his own party.”

Outside of politics, there was widespread confusion over what this all actually means. One view was that no matter what Mr. Cameron says, Britain will still be subject to a financial transaction tax should it go ahead, at least as far as Europe has jurisdiction over its non-British banks. Those banks working in London would, under this scenario, have to pay the taxes back home.

Mr. Cameron said as early as October that London’s financial center, also called the “City” was coming under pressure from the European Union. Some lawmakers were concerned that Brussels would pass laws or financial regulations that would move lucrative financial services from London to Frankfurt or Paris.

“London is the center of financial services in Europe,” Mr. Cameron said in October. “It’s under constant attack through Brussels directives. It’s an area of concern, it’s a key national interest that we need to defend.”

Some analysts said it was far too early to make any assumptions about what Britain’s veto Thursday night would mean for the future of London as a financial center.

“The City has huge benefits for the E.U., and it’s not in the euro zone’s interest to see that evaporate and moved somewhere else,” Yael Selfin, a director at PricewaterhouseCoopers, said. “This is all part of a much longer bargaining process.”

But concerns among some lawmakers remain mainly because London’s financial sector is among the biggest contributors to Britain’s economy. Shrinking the sector by forcing business to the European continent could have a negative impact on economic growth.

“The concern is that if the U.K. finds itself increasingly isolated,” Mr. Penn said. “You can see — if you’re a pessimist — that Europe could get its revenge on the U.K. by a whole array of bureaucratic and regulatory reforms.” In that scenario, continental banks would be prohibited from dealing with the City unless the British firms adhered to Europe’s regulations.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/10/world/europe/britain-isolated-after-vetoing-euro-zone-pact.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Greek Leaders Reach Deal to Form a New Government

The agreement on Sunday appeared to break a political deadlock that had paralyzed Greece in the face of an acute financial crisis that threatened to infect other euro-zone nations, especially Italy. European leaders see the debt-relief deal struck with Greece on Oct. 26 as crucial to containing the crisis in Greece and insulating Italy, a much larger economy whose political leaders have also struggled to cut budgets and deal with heavy debt.

Yields on Italian bonds — the price Italy must pay to borrow money on international markets — rose on Monday to over 6.6 percent, the highest since the introduction of the euro more than a decade ago, news reports said.

But in a statement reported by the ANSA news agency, Mr. Berlusconi said talk of his resignation before a crucial parliamentary vote on Tuesday was “without foundation.”

The agreement in Greece could not have come soon enough for its European partners, who have pressed the country hard to forge a broader political consensus behind the debt deal. But it was not clear whether the agreement would provide the certainty that skeptical investors are demanding to calm turbulent financial markets.

The debt deal requires that the Greek Parliament pass a new round of deeply unpopular austerity measures, including layoffs of government workers, in a climate of growing social unrest. It also calls for permanent foreign monitoring in Greece to ensure that it makes good on its pledges of structural changes to revitalize its economy, a requirement that many Greeks see as an affront to national sovereignty.

With a narrow and eroding majority in Parliament, Mr. Papandreou’s Socialist government found that it could not unify to push through such measures on its own, but Antonis Samaras, the leader of the conservative New Democracy party, opposed many of the debt deal’s provisions and demanded Mr. Papandreou’s resignation and a snap election. After days of frantic political wrangling, Mr. Papandreou survived a confidence vote in Parliament on Friday, setting the stage for Sunday’s compromise.

The new unity government, in which the major parties would share power, is widely expected to be led by a nonpolitician and to govern for several months, long enough to carry out the debt deal and pass a budget for 2011. The name of the new prime minister and the composition of the new cabinet were not expected to be announced until Monday, when the leaders will meet again, according to a statement Sunday night by the Greek president, Karolos Papoulias, who moderated the talks on Sunday.

In a statement early Monday morning, the Greek Finance Ministry said that delegations from the Socialist Party and New Democracy met on Sunday “to discuss the time frame of the actions” to implement the debt deal, and added that the two parties regarded Feb. 19 as “the most appropriate date for elections.”

In reaching the agreement, Mr. Papandreou agreed to meet Mr. Samaras’s demand that he step down as prime minister, while Mr. Samaras agreed to back the debt deal and a seven-point plan of priorities proposed by Mr. Papandreou that would essentially commit the new government to the terms of the debt deal.

Mr. Samaras is not expected to play a role in the unity government, but would be New Democracy’s candidate for prime minister in the general election.

In many ways, a new interim government for Greece buys time for European leaders to put together a stronger bailout mechanism that would protect larger economies from the risk of default, chief among them Italy. High debt, low growth and Mr. Berlusconi’s diminishing credibility have made that nation increasingly vulnerable.

“The decision is very positive, because it will appease the markets and because it shows that Greek authorities are doing what foreign leaders want them to do — to get on with implementing the conditions for the E.U. debt deal,” said Athanassios Papandropoulos, an economist and commentator for the conservative Greek newspaper Estia.

Landon Thomas Jr. contributed reporting.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=b3f9d4ecb7d12beda625c512357188ed