DUBLIN (AP) Ireland's government wants the European Union to provide a new precautionary credit line worth some 10 billion euros ($13 billion) to ease the country's planned exit this year from its international bailout.
Finance Minister Michael Noonan said Ireland needs the credit line only as last-ditch insurance as the country prepares to re-enter the bond markets fully by the end of this year.
In an interview with the Irish Independent newspaper, Noonan said an EU-backed credit line of 10 billion euros would equate roughly to Ireland's forecast 2014 budget deficit. He said such a guarantee should reassure bond buyers to snap up new Irish securities at affordable rates.
"But my hope would be that it (an EU credit line) would just be there as a backstop to give confidence to our lenders, that we'd actually never have to use the precautionary credit line," Noonan was quoted as saying in the interview published Friday.
The EU's bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, contains two options for member states to negotiate advance credit agreements in the event that a surprise market shock undermines a euro member's ability to sell its bonds at reasonable rates.