Merkel calls on coalition parties to compromise

epa06495371 German Chancellor Angela Merkel (C) of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), arrives at the SPD headquarters Willy-Brandt-Haus, in Berlin, Germany, 04 Febuary 2018. The leaders of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the Christian Social Union (CSU) from Bavaria and the German Social Democratic Party (SPD) met for another round of coalition talks to form a new German government.  EPA-EFE/TILL RIMMELE

Bloomberg

Chancellor Angela Merkel called on Germany’s prospective coalition parties to compromise, pointing to turbulence on global stock markets as adding urgency to talks to end the country’s political impasse.
After more than four weeks of coalition negotiations between her Christian Democrat-led bloc and the Social Democratic Party, Merkel faces the most serious deadline yet in her bid for a fourth term. The deadlock, two days after a target came and went without a deal, comes as first Asian and then European markets tumbled, sending a gauge of world stocks toward the biggest three-day slide since 2015.
“We must not lose sight of the important points, when we look at the turbulent stock market developments of the last few hours,” Merkel said ahead of decisive talks in Berlin. “We live in troubled times.”
With many points in a draft government pact already agreed, SPD leaders are holding out for selling points to present to their divided base, which will have the final say in a membership ballot. That increases pressure for concessions by Merkel’s bloc to cajole SPD members into renewing the alliance that’s governed Europe’s biggest economy since 2013.

‘PAINFUL COMPROMISES’
“All of us will have to make painful compromises,” Merkel said, pointing to open issues such labor and health-care policy as well as ensuring Germany’s ability to play a role on the global stage. “I’m willing to do this if we can ensure that the advantages outweigh the disadvantages.” Germany’s benchmark DAX index fell 3.6 percent at the open in the biggest decline since June 2016 as the global equity rout extended on Tuesday. The S&P 500 plunged 4.1 percent, erasing its 2018 gain, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 4.6 percent, the most since 2011.
German political negotiations went into overtime as the SPD seeks to curb the use of temporary work contracts and end health-care advantages for the country’s small minority of privately insured patients.
“It’s crunch time,” Andreas Scheuer, general secretary of Merkel’s CSU Bavarian sister party, told reporters before talks resumed in Berlin. “Germany needs a stable government. We know that we have to come to an agreement today.”

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