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IMF's Lagarde: euro likely to survive 2012

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International Monetary Fund's Managing Director Christine Lagarde addresses a roundtable discussion in Lagos, December 20, 2011. REUTERS/Stephen Jaffe-IMF/Handout

International Monetary Fund's Managing Director Christine Lagarde addresses a roundtable discussion in Lagos, December 20, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Stephen Jaffe-IMF/Handout

PRETORIA | Fri Jan 6, 2012 3:54am EST

PRETORIA (Reuters) - The euro is likely to survive 2012 despite the debt crisis in the euro currency zone, International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde said on Friday.

European leaders will hold another summit this month to try to resolve the crisis which threatens the survival of the single currency 10 years after it went into circulation.

"Will 2012 be the end of the euro currency? I seriously don't think so. Its a young currency, its a solid one as well," Lagarde told journalists on a visit to South Africa.

"You have within the zone, not in relation to the currency, serious pressure and issues concerning the sovereign debt, concerning the strength of the banking system which are being addressed. But the currency itself is not one that would vanish or disappear in 2012, not at all."

Lagarde, in South Africa as part of her first tour of the continent since taking the IMF post, reiterated that the fund would likely revise downwards its 4 percent growth forecast for the world economy in 2012.

Emerging markets such as South Africa have borne the brunt of global risk aversion triggered by the euro zone crisis. Its rand currency fell nearly 23 percent against the dollar last year.

South African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said more action was needed globally to address currency volatility resulting from the euro zone crisis.

"Clearly the current weakness in the currency is beneficial for exporters but has the flip side effect of inflationary pressures which the Reserve Bank has to actually deal with," he added.

Lagarde was due to meet Reserve Bank Governor Gill Marcus later on Friday and President Jacob Zuma on Saturday.

(Writing by Stella Mapenzauswa)

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Comments (4)
Intriped wrote:
It will not go away but it will not see 1.00 Euro gets you 1.54 USD again again. It never should have reached that level. Europe and it’s assets are no better off than the USA to include industries.

Jan 06, 2012 4:45am EST  --  Report as abuse
Highguide1 wrote:
Having spent 4 years viewing Reuters I find myself in the position where I needed to sign up and respond to this article, I have never read so much nonsensical blatant lies from the so called controllers of the monopoly game. I feel strongly about our enlightened brothers and sisters throughout Europe and the U.S and deeply hope that you find Truth and Triumph in this highly oppressed, controlled, and manipulated period. God Bless you all from the Great Southern Land, you are not alone.

Jan 06, 2012 4:50am EST  --  Report as abuse
François Asselienau (French candidat to the 2012 president election in France, u-p-r.fr) explains why in 2000 years no empire succeed to unificate the europeam country (Jules Cesar, Charlemagne, CharleQuint, Napoleon II and III Reich…)

European citizen, especially in the piigs, are now ready to leave the euro.

To big to save! Let them go. Nobody would and can pay those huuuuuuuuge debts…

Jan 06, 2012 11:21am EST  --  Report as abuse
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