On Wednesday afternoon, global news agency Reuters quoted “a senior EU official in Brussels” who informed them that, "France and Germany have had intense consultations on this issue over the last months, at all levels.”
Reuters’ source added that while these discussions had been kept purely on an “intellectual” level, senior policymakers in Paris, Berlin and Brussels were considering the possibility of one or more countries exiting from the euro zone, leaving the remaining core to push on toward deeper economic integration, including on tax and fiscal policy.
The report seem to go in line with public statements made by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy last week, who raised the prospect of a member state leaving the euro – claiming that then Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou’s plan for a national referendum over its bailout deal would be in-or-out vote on euro membership. Papandreou later pulled the ballot, and subsequently announced his resignation from his post.
However, less than a day after the Reuters report, a French government official came out to deny the claims made by the global news agency, telling Bloomberg that any speculation of the sort was “ridiculous” and there had been no plans whatsoever to shrink the 17-nation euro region.
Adding to the confusion was an emailed statement made by Germany’s Finance Ministry that had been made in direct response to the report. While the ministry claimed that the report had been “rumours” that were “unfounded and wrong”, the statement added that eurozone leaders had asked European Union President Herman van Rompuy, European Commission President Jose Barroso and Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker – who chairs meetings of euro-region finance ministers – to present an interim report that would include “the question of possible treaty changes” and “a time frame for the further strengthening of the euro zone.”
The mere possibility of a smaller eurozone, though, has raised debate over its practicality, with voices from both camps arguing over the potential benefits of such a move.