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Despite Setbacks, EU Leaders Upbeat on Economic Turnaround


German Chancellor Angela Merkel (R) speaks with French President Francois Hollande (L) during a round table meeting at an EU summit in Brussels, March 15, 2013.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel (R) speaks with French President Francois Hollande (L) during a round table meeting at an EU summit in Brussels, March 15, 2013.
Eurozone officials meeting in Brussels say international lenders struck a deal early Saturday to give Cyprus a bailout of about $13 billion to avoid bankruptcy.

On Friday, European leaders agreed that tough measures to turn around the European region's economy are working, even amid rising protests against austerity.

Speaking to reporters in the Belgian capital, EU President Herman Van Rompuy outlined a four-pronged strategy that the 27-member block will implement in the year ahead to turn around its struggling economy. Among other areas, it focuses on financial stability, growth and youth employment.

"On the question of where does this growth come from, the answer was confidence, credit and competitiveness. On top of this, there is a need for a specific employment policy making our growth more labor intensive," said Van Rompuy.

The emphasis on growth, as well as spending cuts, comes amid mounting popular protests against austerity measures in Europe - protests that reached the heart of the EU on Friday as thousands of people demonstrated outside the Brussels building where European leaders wrapped up their summit.

Cultivating growth

In another sign of discontent this week, the European Parliament rejected the EU's budget, calling for more growth measures to be included.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said he understood public frustration.

"We are in a painful process of adjustment, of deleveraging, because of excessive public debt accumulated over the years," said Barroso. "Because of excessive private debt -including by the way, some financial bubbles, real estate bubbles, a lot of imbalances in our economy - and also because of some behavior that was quite irresponsible in some areas of the financial sector."

Job creation

To alleviate the pain, Barroso said it is important to mix in short-term social measures - what he describes as "quick wins" - to boost growth. That includes creating jobs, particularly among young people, whose unemployment rate reaches as high as 50 percent in some places.

EU members like France also are calling for more flexibility in budget deficit targets they are likely to miss this year. But German Chancellor Angela Merkel defended austerity measures, saying that spending cuts and growth worked together and not in contradiction.

The financial problems of the island nation of Cyprus continued to shadow this EU summit, with the plight of Cyprus's banks a major challenge.
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