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Britons, shown outside the Bank of England in London, can expect large budget cuts. "Britain has the largest budget deficit in the EU. … We're going to accelerate the reduction of that deficit," said Treasury chief George Osborne.
Britons, shown outside the Bank of England in London, can expect large budget cuts. “Britain has the largest budget deficit in the EU. … We’re going to accelerate the reduction of that deficit,” said Treasury chief George Osborne.
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BRUSSELS — European Union finance ministers backed tougher sanctions to prevent them running up too much debt in the hopes of winning back market confidence and getting a handle on the debt crisis that is threatening the euro.

The European Union’s president, Herman Van Rompuy, said the talks Friday showed “it was very clear that there was a broad consensus on the principle of having sanctions” — both financial and political.

Current limits on debt and deficits are backed up on paper by heavy fines, which have never been imposed — effectively allowing Greece and others to ignore them and build up massive debt.

Van Rompuy gave no details of new sanctions because officials from the EU’s 27 governments, the European Central Bank and the European Commission are only starting work on changes to widely flouted EU budget rules. EU leaders are due to decide on long-term reforms at an October summit.

Germany, which is providing the largest chunks of bailout funds for Greece and the euro zone, is keen on harsher punishments for countries that break the rules to deter them from seeking financial rescue, such as stripping EU governments of voting rights or development funds or even ejecting them from the euro currency.

Van Rompuy indicated he was opposed to those penalties. Such changes to EU treaties would require each country to amend its national law — a painful and lengthy process that could be rejected by national parliaments or voters.

“We must work as far as possible within the framework of the current treaties,” he said, because it “allows us to work far more rapidly.”

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde echoed him, saying, “We considered today what is deliverable quickly.”

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said there were no takers for his idea of setting out how a country would go bankrupt, an “orderly default” that could reassure investors by spelling out how much they could expect to lose on government bonds.

“Everything is on the agenda,” he told reporters. “We should do what we can do very fast.”

Schaeuble told lawmakers in Berlin that the country had to make the rescue package a reality “because markets will only trust when it is actually in effect.”

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