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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Le Pen moots replacing euro

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Ingrid Melander -


French far-right party leader Marine Le Pen has said France should leave the euro but the shift to a new national currency could be accompanied by a framework similar to the pre-euro era of the ECU.


The National Front leader, a candidate in the presidential election in spring, said France’s national debt would be denominated in the new national currency under her administration.


Le Pen is alone among top presidential candidates in favouring leaving the euro, which France adopted in 1999 after ditching the franc along with other European countries who abandoned their national currencies. But she has offered little detail about how the departure could happen until now.


With just a few months left to the first round of the election in late April, mentioning the framework of the ECU could be a move by Le Pen to reassure voters worried over a euro exit.


“The ECU existed alongside a national currency,” Le Pen said. “A national currency co-existing with a common currency would not have any consequences for French daily life,” she added.


The ECU was a basket of European currencies used as a unit of account by members of the bloc in the two decades leading up to the introduction of the single currency in 1999.


Le Pen reiterated her party’s stance that leaving the euro would be a major step to recovering sovereignty, something she said she would seek to achieve in negotiations with other EU countries.


She said economic difficulties in other euro zone countries led her to believe she could find allies in such talks. She reaffirmed she would put the result of these talks to a referendum.


Opinion polls have consistently shown Le Pen making it to the second round of the presidential election, to be held in May, but losing that run-off to a mainstream candidate, likely to be conservative Francois Fillon.


Surveys also show that despite strong misgivings about the EU and the euro, the French want to remain members of both groups.


“All this (Le Pen’s comments) probably reflects a reluctance to openly advocate a full retreat from the monetary union,” said Bank of America Merrill Lynch chief European economist Gilles Moec.


Nicolas Bay, a senior National Front official, said the party had stated the euro did not work and now it was engaged in a “second phase” of explaining how a new system could function.


Le Pen’s deputy Florian Philippot said some degree of monetary cooperation with other European countries does not represent a change in the leader’s view that France should leave the euro.


“A currency following the ECU model is not a currency you have in your wallet or your bank account. It’s an accounting currency between countries,” he said. —Reuters


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