US and Germany urge more investment to spur growth

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US Secretary of the Treasury Jack Lew, center, smiles as German Vice Chancellor and Minister for Economy and Energy Sigmar Gabriel, right, shakes hands with United States ambassador John B. Emerson, left, after a meeting in Berlin, Thursday.

US Secretary of the Treasury Jack Lew, center, smiles as German Vice Chancellor and Minister for Economy and Energy Sigmar Gabriel, right, shakes hands with United States ambassador John B. Emerson, left, after a meeting in Berlin, Thursday.

BERLIN: US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew and Germany’s finance minister called Thursday for an investment boost to help spur economic growth on both sides of the Atlantic.

“More can be done in both the USA and Europe to strengthen growth and job creation, particularly through efforts to boost public and private investment,” Lew told a joint press conference after holding talks with Wolfgang Schaeuble.

“Greater investment would help generate much needed demand in the near-term while also supporting longer-term growth potential,” he said.

Schaeuble, Germany’s conservative veteran finance minister who is a strong defender of budgetary rigour, said that investment did not only have to be via public funding.

“We also need very much more private investment, also in long-term infrastructure projects,” he told reporters.

Both Schaeuble and Lew indicated agreement on the importance of pushing ahead with negotiations to seal an ambitious transatlantic free trade pact between the European Union and United States.

On Lew’s last visit to Berlin in January, he called on export powerhouse Germany to spur demand at home to help revive European growth.

He again raised the issue Thursday, saying: “We continue to believe there is a demand problem in the world and continue to believe that policies that would help strengthen demand would be helpful. “But we agree there needs to be a balance between short-term and long-term steps.”

And amid a debate over granting some EU members more leeway under the EU’s strict fiscal rules, Schaeuble reiterated comments by Chancellor Angela Merkel that the Stability Pact already contains enough flexibility.

He said that success in overcoming recession in the euro zone had shown “that we have been successful with this European stabilization policy”.

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