International Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde, right, talks with Spanish Economy Minister Luis de Guindos Jurado, during the Eurogroup finance ministers meeting in Brussels, Monday, Nov, 12, 2012. Greece?s international lenders have prepared a ?positive? report on the country?s reform efforts, a crucial step in its efforts to secure the next installment of its bailout loan, the head the of group of finance ministers from the 17 euro countries said Monday. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)
International Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde, right, talks with Spanish Economy Minister Luis de Guindos Jurado, during the Eurogroup finance ministers meeting in Brussels, Monday, Nov, 12, 2012. Greece?s international lenders have prepared a ?positive? report on the country?s reform efforts, a crucial step in its efforts to secure the next installment of its bailout loan, the head the of group of finance ministers from the 17 euro countries said Monday. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)
BRUSSELS (AP) ? Shoring up Europe's banking sector and strengthening oversight of economic policies will top the agenda of a meeting Tuesday of the European Union's 27 finance ministers.
The Cypriot finance minister, Vassos Shiarly, who will chair the meeting, called it "a very challenging agenda." Weakness in the banking sector and inadequate monitoring of national budgets were prime causes of Europe's three-year financial crisis.
Those at the meeting will discuss the issue of setting up an EU banking union overseen by a single supervisor, as well as increasing capital requirements for banks. In addition, the finance ministers will discuss how to more closely monitor the draft budgets of EU members and correct excessive deficits.
The discussions come at a time when European leaders think they are at long last beginning to emerge from the financial crisis.
"The worst is behind us, although we can't be entirely certain," Italian Premier Mario Monti said Tuesday in an interview with French radio station Europe 1.
But he warned European leaders still needed to act quickly to spur economic growth, the key ingredient that has been lacking in much of the continent as it tries to get its finances back in balance. Official figures due later this week are expected to show the 17-country eurozone fell into recession ? technically defined as two consecutive quarters of economic contraction ? in the third quarter.
Another stubborn issue is how to get Greece's public debt down so the country can eventually survive without bailout loans.
On Monday, the 17 eurozone finance ministers held a contentious meeting at which they failed to approve a new installment of bailout money for Greece. The discussion faltered over a disagreement between the EU and the International Monetary Fund ? two of Greece's three creditors ? on the timeline for bringing Greece's debts down to a manageable level. The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, wants to give Greece until 2022 to reduce its debt to 120 percent of gross domestic product; but the IMF wants to stick to the original deadline of 2020.
Eurozone officials will hold another meeting Nov. 20 to hash out a compromise, which must come before Greece gets its next batch of loans. French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said they would hand Greece its next loan installment, worth ?31.5 billion ($40 billion), by the end of the month.
The meeting did agree to give Greece until 2016 ? that is, two more years ? to make the reforms necessary to right its economy and begin reducing its debts.
But Greece's creditors still have to decide how they will pay for the extension; officials have said it will cost about ?30 billion extra through 2016.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Tuesday morning that Greece's lenders wouldn't necessarily have to fork over more cash to plug the hole. He suggested that it could be filled by lowering the interest rates of the loans. He ruled out, however, asking eurozone countries to accept losses on their loans ? as some have suggested might be necessary to reduce Greece's debt burden.
On Monday, eurozone finance ministers also discussed the plan to restore the capital levels of Spanish banks, saying it was proceeding well. On Tuesday, Luis De Guindos, the Spanish economy minister, echoed that analysis.
"In early December, we will do the recapitalization of Spanish bank system and everything goes as we established," he said.
He added that the so-called "bad bank," a fund that would buy up soured investments from banks at a discount, would be established Dec. 1. The hope is that Spanish banks will lend more once those bad investments are no longer on their books.
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Don Melvin can be reached at http://twitter.com/Don_Melvin . Sarah DiLorenzo can be reached at http://twitter.com/sdilorenzo .
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