Bulgaria, Romania Fail Economic Tests to Join Euro

Euro banknotes are seen in this illustration taken July 17, 2022. Reuters
Euro banknotes are seen in this illustration taken July 17, 2022. Reuters
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Bulgaria, Romania Fail Economic Tests to Join Euro

Euro banknotes are seen in this illustration taken July 17, 2022. Reuters
Euro banknotes are seen in this illustration taken July 17, 2022. Reuters

The eastward expansion of Europe’s single currency has suffered a setback after Bulgaria and Romania failed to meet the economic criteria needed to adopt the euro.
The decision announced by the European Central Bank (ECB) and European Commission on Wednesday means Bulgaria’s ambition of joining the Eurozone at the start of next year will be frustrated, according to The Financial Times.
Their review also confirmed Romania’s hopes of euro membership remain as distant as ever, the newspaper said.
The ECB and commission said the two countries on the Black Sea coast — which are among the poorest EU members — had inflation that was too high compared with the rest of the bloc and expressed doubts about whether their institutions were strong enough to tackle corruption and money laundering.
Both countries are seeking to follow in the footsteps of Croatia, which became the 20th country to adopt the euro at the start of 2023.
Bulgaria is the closest country to Eurozone membership, having pegged its lev currency to the euro for years, allowed its biggest banks to be supervised by the ECB and kept relatively low debt and budget deficit levels.
If it had met the necessary conditions, Bulgaria could have joined the euro at the start of 2025, the Financial Times wrote.
In the commission’s assessment of six non-euro EU countries’ readiness to join the single currency area, Bulgaria fulfilled every criteria except bringing inflation down to EU levels.
The newspaper quoted the ECB as saying that inflation in Bulgaria averaged 5.1% in the year to May, down from 5.9% a year earlier but still well above the 3.3% maximum threshold calculated in relation to other EU members.
While the assessment’s outcome was as expected, Bulgaria’s previous government had hoped the EU executive would exercise leniency given that Sofia is expected to meet the price stability criterion later this year.
Instead, the commission has agreed to reassess the country’s suitability to join the euro at Bulgaria’s request, rather than waiting for the next regular review in two years, according to EU and Bulgarian officials.
Bulgarians are split on joining the euro, with recent polls showing 49% are in favor and a similar percentage are against.
The ECB also said Sofia was still “working towards” implementing a number of commitments, including “strengthening its anti-money laundering framework”, and raised concerns about a constitutional amendment allowing the president to appoint the governor or deputy governor of Bulgaria’s central bank as interim prime minister.
Institutional quality and governance were improving but still “relatively weak” in Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary, the ECB said.
It cited “weaknesses in the business environment, an inefficient public administration, tax evasion, corruption, a lack of social inclusion, a lack of transparency, a lack of judicial independence and/or poor access to online services”.
Former Bulgarian premier Nikolai Denkov recently told the Financial Times that corruption was also a way for Russia to peddle influence in Bulgaria, a big point of concern for western allies.
The country has been beset by persistent political turmoil, while corruption and organized crime have kept it out of closer integration with other EU peers, allowing only a partial entry into the border-free Schengen zone earlier this year.
Sofia has had six elections in just over three years since strongman former leader Boyko Borisov was ousted in 2021 after anti-corruption protests.
Another election is considered likely this year after a vote in June failed to deliver a stable government.
Bulgaria remains the EU’s poorest member, with gross domestic product per capita a third below the bloc’s average.
Inflation in Romania was well above the required level after price growth averaged 7.6% in the past year. It also fell short on the ECB’s fiscal assessment, having breached the EU’s debt rules since 2020 and run a 6.6% budget deficit last year — well above the EU’s 3 per cent limit — and little prospect of it falling below Brussels’ target this year.
Overall, the ECB said there had been “limited progress” by non-Eurozone members in converging towards the single currency bloc owing to “challenging economic conditions” caused by the fallout from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The other four countries assessed — Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Sweden — also had inflation above the level required to join the euro and all except Sweden breached the EU fiscal rules, according to The Financial Times.
The quartet are not seeking euro membership, however. Romania last year set a target to join the euro by 2029, but President Klaus Iohannis has questioned setting any firm date for the country.

 



Trump's Greenland Threat Puts Europe Inc back in Tariff Crosshairs

A worker adjusts European Union and US flags at the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, November 11, 2013.
A worker adjusts European Union and US flags at the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, November 11, 2013.
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Trump's Greenland Threat Puts Europe Inc back in Tariff Crosshairs

A worker adjusts European Union and US flags at the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, November 11, 2013.
A worker adjusts European Union and US flags at the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, November 11, 2013.

Just as European companies were getting used to last year's hard-won US trade tariff deals, President Donald Trump has put them back in his ​crosshairs with an explosive threat to place levies on nations that oppose his planned takeover of Greenland.

Trump on Saturday said he would put rising tariffs from February 1 on goods imported from EU members Denmark, Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Finland, along with Britain and Norway, until the US is allowed to buy Greenland, a step major EU states decried as blackmail.

On Sunday, European Union ambassadors reached broad agreement to intensify efforts to dissuade Trump from imposing those tariffs, while also readying a package of retaliatory measures should the duties go ahead, EU diplomats said.

The shock move has rattled through industry and sent shockwaves through markets amid fears of a return to the volatility of last year's trade war, which was only eased with tariff deals reached in the middle of the year.

"This is a very serious situation, the scale of which is unknown," Gabriel Picard, ‌chairman of the French ‌wine and spirits export lobby FEVS, told Reuters.

He said the industry had already seen a ‌20% ⁠to ​25% hit ‌to US activity in the second half of last year from previous trade measures, and new tariffs would bring a "material" impact.

But he said what was happening went far beyond sectoral issues. "It is more a matter of political contacts and political intent that must be taken to the highest level in Europe, so that Europe, once again, is united, coordinated, and if possible speaks with one voice."

STAND-OFF COULD BRING BACK LAST YEAR'S TRADE WAR

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said additional 10% import tariffs would take effect next month on goods from the listed European nations — all already subject to tariffs imposed by the US president last year of between 10% and 15%.

The bloc - which had an estimated $1.5 trillion in goods and services trade with the US in 2024 - looks set ⁠to fight back. Europe has major carmakers in Germany, drugmakers in Denmark and Ireland, and consumer and luxury goods firms from Italy to France.

EU leaders are set to discuss options at an emergency ‌summit in Brussels on Thursday, including a 93 billion euro ($107.7 billion) package of tariffs on ‍US imports that could automatically kick in on February 6 after a ‍six-month pause.

The other is the so far never used "Anti-Coercion Instrument" (ACI), which could limit access to public tenders, investments or banking activity or restrict ‍trade in services, in which the US has a surplus with the bloc.

Analysts said the key question was how Europe responded - with a more "classic" trade war tit-for-tat tariff retaliation, or an even tougher approach.

"The most likely way forward is a return to the trade war that was put on hold in high-level US agreements with the UK and the EU in summer," said Carsten Nickel, deputy director of research at Teneo in London.

COMPANIES WILL LOOK TO TRADE WITH 'LESS PROBLEMATIC NATIONS'

German submarine maker ​TKMS CEO Oliver Burkhard said the Greenland threat was perhaps the jolt that Europe needed to toughen its approach and focus on developing its own joint programmes to be more independent from the US.

"It is probably necessary... to get ⁠a kick in the shin to realise that we may have to suit up differently in the future," he told Reuters.

Susannah Streeter, chief investment strategist at Wealth Club, said the new threat created "another layer" of complexity for firms grappling with an already "chaotic" US market. Firms had little capacity to soak up new tariffs, she added.

"A trade war only creates losers," said Christophe Aufrere, director general of French autos association the PFA.

An official at a French industry association that represents the country's largest firms added the Greenland issue was turning tariffs into a "tool for political pressure", and called for the region to reduce its dependency on the US market.

Neil Shearing, group chief economist at Capital Economics, pointed out that some EU countries - Spain, Italy and others - were not on the tariff list, which would likely see "re-routing" of trade within the EU free trade bloc to avoid the taxes.

Analysts added the new tariffs - if imposed - would likely hurt Trump. They would push up US prices and lead to front-loading of exports before the tariffs kicked in, while encouraging companies to seek new markets.

"For Europe, this is a bad geopolitical headache and a moderately significant economic problem. But it could also backfire for Trump," said Holger Schmieding, London-based chief economist at Berenberg.

"Logic ‌still points to an outcome that respects Greenland's right to self-determination, strengthens security in the Arctic for NATO as a whole, and largely avoids economic damage for Europe and the US."


IMF Upgrades Outlook for Surprisingly Resilient World Economy to 3.3% Growth this Year

FILE PHOTO: A view of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo at its headquarters in Washington, D.C., US, November 24, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier//File Photo/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A view of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo at its headquarters in Washington, D.C., US, November 24, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier//File Photo/File Photo
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IMF Upgrades Outlook for Surprisingly Resilient World Economy to 3.3% Growth this Year

FILE PHOTO: A view of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo at its headquarters in Washington, D.C., US, November 24, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier//File Photo/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A view of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo at its headquarters in Washington, D.C., US, November 24, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier//File Photo/File Photo

An unexpectedly sturdy world economy is likely to shrug off President Donald Trump's protectionist trade policies this year, thanks partly to a surge of investment in artificial intelligence in North America and Asia, the International Monetary Fund said in a report out Monday.

The 191-nation lending organization expects that global growth will come in at 3.3% this year, same as in 2025 but up from the 3.1% it had forecast for 2026 back in October, The Associated Press reported.

The world economy "continues to show notable resilience despite significant US-led trade disruptions and heightened uncertainty,'' IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas and his colleague Tobias Adrian wrote in a blog post accompanying the latest update to the fund's World Economic Outlook.

The US economy, benefiting from the strongest pace of technology investment since 2001, is forecast to expand 2.4% this year, an upgrade on the fund's October forecast and on expected 2025 growth — both 2.1%.

China — the world's second-largest economy — is forecast to see 4.5% growth, an improvement on the 4.2% the IMF had predicted October, partly because a trade truce with the United States has reduced American tariffs on Chinese exports.

India, which has supplanted China as the world's fastest-growing major economy, is expected to see growth decelerate from 7.3% last year (when it was juiced by an unexpectedly strong second half) to a still-healthy 6.4% in 2026.


France Says Still Loyal to Syria Kurds, Hails Ceasefire

Syrian army personnel celebrate as government forces enter Raqqa city following the withdrawal of Syrian Democratic Forces, in Raqqa, Syria, January 18, 2026. REUTERS/Karam al-Masri
Syrian army personnel celebrate as government forces enter Raqqa city following the withdrawal of Syrian Democratic Forces, in Raqqa, Syria, January 18, 2026. REUTERS/Karam al-Masri
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France Says Still Loyal to Syria Kurds, Hails Ceasefire

Syrian army personnel celebrate as government forces enter Raqqa city following the withdrawal of Syrian Democratic Forces, in Raqqa, Syria, January 18, 2026. REUTERS/Karam al-Masri
Syrian army personnel celebrate as government forces enter Raqqa city following the withdrawal of Syrian Democratic Forces, in Raqqa, Syria, January 18, 2026. REUTERS/Karam al-Masri

France on Monday welcomed a ceasefire between the Syrian government and Kurdish-led forces and stressed it remained loyal to the latter who spearheaded the battle against the ISIS group.

"France is faithful to its allies," the foreign ministry said, urging all sides to respect the ceasefire deal, which will also see the Kurdish administration and forces integrate into the state after months of stalled negotiations.