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Dutch PM Rutte to face lawmakers after quitting.

Barrack-Obummer

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"By Marie-Laure Michel (AFP) – 16 hours ago
THE HAGUE —Outgoing liberal Prime Minister Mark Rutte will address the Dutch parliament on Tuesday to explain why his government crashed in the wake of failed austerity talks with a far-right ally.

Rutte, who has been silent since Saturday, should take the podium at 1200 GMT when he will detail the circumstances and consequences of his cabinet's resignation -- handed to Queen Beatrix on Monday -- after 18 months in power.

The country now faces the prospect of fresh elections later this year, the date of which will be debated in Tuesday's parliamentary session.

The crisis was triggered Saturday when Rutte's far-right parliamentary ally, the Freedom Party led by Geert Wilders, walked out of budget negotiations.

The talks were designed to ensure that Europe's fifth-largest economy brings itself back within eurozone deficit targets.

But Wilders, an arch eurosceptic best known for campaigning against Islam, said his supporters "could not live up to the demands" and accused Brussels of "stealing money from the wallets of the poor."

Although not part of the ruling coalition, Wilders' party had effectively guaranteed the government's majority for the last 18 months by supporting it in parliament. That arrangement now lies in tatters.

Rutte's liberal VVD party, its coalition partner the Christian Democrats and Wilders' Freedom Party had been negotiating on a near-daily basis, in private, for seven weeks but divisions were made public when Wilders walked out.

Rutte, the CDA's Maxime Verhagen and Wilders had held talks at the premier's official Catshuis residence in a bid to agree on how to cut 16 billion euros (U$21 billion) from the budget, which stood at 4.7 percent of GDP in 2011.

The EU's deficit ceiling is three percent of GDP.

Despite the crisis, Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager remained optimistic on Monday that a proposed austerity package would be approved and presented to the European Commission, which has set an April 30 deadline.

The package "is solid, it is sustainable and it is also for the long term a good budget," De Jager said.

"We will soon talk to the Lower House over the proposals and I foresee we will find a majority for it so we can send it to Brussels."

Parliament is to discuss the issue Tuesday afternoon -- as well as the much-discussed possible date for new elections.

"We want an election as soon as possible, as it is the only way to get the Netherlands out of this impasse and make a fresh start," Labour Party (PvdA) leader Diederik Samsom told the Christian daily Trouw newspaper on Tuesday.

Labour, the largest opposition party in parliament with 30 seats, as well as Rutte's VVD party favour early polls.

But the Electoral Council, responsible for organising the vote, said it believed September 5 the earliest realistic date for new elections.

The final decision however, rest with the outgoing Dutch cabinet.

Wilders too said he favoured early polls, but a survey conducted Sunday by a national polling agency gave his PVV party only 19 seats, five less than in the 2010 elections.

Copyright © 2012 AFP. All rights reserved."



It's ironic that the Netherlands, along with Germany, has been one of the leading criticis of the profligacy of Greece and the southern European countries, and has been leading the demand for further austerity in those countries. It will be quite humiliating if Holland now fails to pass its own austerity program. Furthermore, Holland is one of the few European countries left with an AAA credit rating, and failure to pass the austerity measures would probably cause it to lose the rating, raising the costs of borrowing money in the future.
 
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It's ironic that the Netherlands, along with Germany, has been one of the leading criticis of the profligacy of Greece and the southern European countries, and has been leading the demand for further austerity in those countries. It will be quite humiliating if Holland now fails to pass its own austerity program. Furthermore, Holland is one of the few European countries left with an AAA credit rating, and failure to pass the austerity measures would probably cause it to lose the rating, raising the costs of borrowing money in the future.

A possible depreciation for the Netherlands would have little impact. Surely, with some reforms the Dutch would regain their triple A status. The increase of the interest rates of yesterday have already stabilized today. AAA or AA+, it doesn't really matter.
 
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Moody’s maintains triple-A rating for Netherlands

When seven weeks of coalition talks on a raft of austerity measures ended in failure, Moody’s warned that the Netherlands might lose its much-envied triple-A credit rating.

However, financial daily het Financieele Dagblad reports that the company is a lot milder in its Weekly Credit Outlook published on Monday. Moody's is positive about the budget agreement reached by the outgoing cabinet and opposition parties Green Left, D66 and Christian Union. Even though Moody’s expects the political situation in the Netherlands to remain volatile for the rest of the year, its misgivings did not translate into consequences for the country’s creditworthiness.

Its solid institutional character framework and fiscal discipline argued in the country’s favour. The Netherlands’ 65-percent ratio between debt and Gross Domestic Product may be higher than it used to be before the financial crisis but is still well below the 87-percent euro zone average. Moody’s predicts the Dutch economy to shrink by 0.6 percent this year and grow by 1.2 percent in 2013.

Just like last week, the credit rater warned that the credibility of the euro zone as a whole could be adversely affected if the Netherlands – one of the countries which has consistently argued for strict adherence to EU budgetary rules – failed to live up to its own standards.

Last week Wednesday Moody’s competitor Fitch Ratings Inc maintained the triple-A credit rating for the Netherlands, but warned this might change should the country fail to reduce its budget deficit to below three percent of GDP by 2013.

(gsh)

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