EU leaders pick bank chief amid controversy 08:42 p.m May 02, 1998 Eastern By Paul Taylor
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European Union leaders chose Dutchman Wim Duisenberg on Sunday to head the central bank that will manage their single currency, but the deal curtailing his term was denounced as a disastrous launch for the euro.
After more than 11 hours of wrangling, the leaders appointed Duisenberg, 62, head of the European Monetary Institute, as president of the European Central Bank nominally for a full eight-year term.
But under a pre-arranged scenario, he immediately informed them that on age grounds he intended to stand down once euro banknotes and coins replace national currencies in the 11 founder states in 2002, and the summit agreed that French central bank governor Jean-Claude Trichet would succeed him.
Economists in the financial markets scorned the arrangement as a political fudge, saying it would undermine the credibility of the fledgling currency to be launched in January.
The president of the European Parliament, Jose-Maria Gil Robles, compared the deal to the birth of a deformed baby and told reporters he had ''no doubt'' it breached the spirit of the Maastricht treaty on European union.
The parliament can withhold approval from ECB appointments, which would be politically damaging, but it cannot veto them.
''I would say it's no good at all for the European Central Bank to start like this,'' Gil Robles said.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who brokered the deal after hours of arm-wrestling among France, the Netherlands and Germany, denied that the outcome was ''a fix or a fudge.''
He insisted it preserved what he called the sanctity of the treaty since Duisenberg was retiring of his own free will and would set his own departure date.
European Commission President Jacques Santer sought to head off any legal challenge by saying that the Commission, as guarantor of EU treaties, certified the agreement's conformity with the letter of the Maastricht treaty.
When French President Jacques Chirac, who had initially insisted on a specific departure date, told a news conference that Duisenberg had decided entirely of his own accord ''for personal reasons'' not to complete his term, reporters burst into laughter, drawing a presidential rebuke.
''Don't laugh, there's no reason,'' Chirac said.
The French leader said the agreement had taken so long because of the risk that it might be challenged in countries such as Germany which have constitutional courts.
The summit appointed Frenchman Christian Noyer, a former Treasury director, as ECB vice-president for four years.
Other members nominated to the executive board were Bank of Italy board member Tomasso Padoa Schioppa, Bank of Spain board member Domingo Solans, German Bundesbank chief economist Otmar Issing and Bank of Finland governor Sirkka Hamalainen.
The leaders also agreed that future appointments would take account of the principle of rotation among member states which were not represented initially on the board.
The horse-trading over the bank presidency overshadowed the historic decision to launch the euro on January 1, 1999, with 11 founder members.
Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Finland, Portugal, Austria, Ireland and Luxembourg will form the world's second biggest economy, equivalent in population, output and trade to the United States.
Britain, Sweden and Denmark opted to stay out of the launch, while Greece intends to join in 2001, by which time it will have met the strict economic convergence criteria.
The European Parliament formally approved the launch on Saturday with a standing ovation.
Dutch Prime Minister Wim Kok, who faces a general election on Thursday, put a brave face on Duisenberg's truncated mandate, saying it was an undoubted success for the Netherlands and ''a good signal to the markets.''
But market economists were withering in their criticism. Peter Praet, chief economist of Belgium's Generale Bank, said: ''The damage is already done...This leaves a very bad taste.''
Both he and Commerzbank economist Juergen Pfister in Frankfurt said the central bank might have to set higher than necessary interest rates when it begins operating next year to restore credibility.
EU finance ministers also confirmed on Sunday that EMU would be based on existing bilateral central rates.
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