Eurozone leaders risk reigniting the sovereign debt crisis unless they agree more funds for the so-called "firewall" designed to calm bond markets, the world's top banking group warned yesterday.
The Institute of International Finance (IIF), which represents 450 banks and finance houses, said the eurozone must expand the €800 billion ($1279 billion) European Stability Mechanism (ESM) created to fund bailouts of member countries.
Such an expansion is the only way to unlock extra money from the International Monetary Fund and finally remove the possibility of a disorderly break-up of the eurozone, the IIF's managing director, Charles Dallara, said in an open letter addressed to IMF and World Bank leaders.
The IMF and World Bank are meeting in Washington next week, and Dallara's letter is designed to put pressure on the finance ministers and central bankers to do more to stabilise the banking system and pull the eurozone out of recession.
He also called for core eurozone nations to ease the pressure on peripheral nations such as Greece to slim down government, for fear that an "austerity overload" could doom the continent to a prolonged recession.