UK Parliament / Open data

Loans to Ireland Bill

Sweden and Denmark are at this moment finalising their loan agreement, and I do not think they have yet made that decision. As I have said, we decided to lend in sterling so that the exchange rate risk would be borne by the Irish rather than the British Government. The official advice from the Treasury is that the loan agreement represents value for money for the British taxpayer. As I said earlier, it is also in line with the terms offered by both the IMF and the eurozone. I have laid before the House a summary of the key terms of the agreement, and a final written agreement will be forthcoming in the next few days—or, potentially, weeks—once the European and IMF assistance has also been agreed. I will, of course, keep the House informed. One thing is clear: Ireland is a friend in need, and it is because our economy is currently in a stronger position than Ireland's that we are able to offer it such reasonable and sensible terms for our bilateral loan.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
520 c939 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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