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Germany and France set up working group on strengthening eurozone

French economy minister Bruno Le Paire met with his German counterpart Wolfgang Schäuble in Berlin on Monday, when the pair agreed that a working group would be set up to study measures for greater integration of the 19-member eurozone before a planned bilateral summit in July.

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Germany and France pledged Monday to seek ways to strengthen the eurozone, with harmonization of corporate taxes among possible measures that they will mull in the coming weeks, reports CTV News.

German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble and new French counterpart Bruno Le Maire said they are setting up a working group to produce proposals for a planned bilateral summit in July.

"We've been talking for years about progress in the integration of the eurozone, but things aren't advancing quickly enough or far enough," Le Maire said. "We are determined to get things moving faster and further, in a very concrete way."

Germany and France could either propose a joint corporate tax system of their own or concentrate on pushing ahead efforts for a harmonized assessment basis for corporate tax at the European Union level, Schäuble said.

"Both are ambitious," he conceded, noting that wider tax harmonization is difficult because it would require consensus among EU leaders.

Le Maire was making his first visit to Berlin since French President Emmanuel Macron's new government was appointed last week. Le Maire's opening comments to a joint news conference were in fluent German, saying there needs to be better co-ordination of economic policy. He said that investment will also be considered.

He stressed France's willingness to consider deeper reforms such as creating a finance minister for the 19-nation eurozone or a "European monetary fund", an idea that Schaeuble has periodically backed.

He offered assurances that "France will respect its European obligations in terms of [budget] deficit reduction."

Read more of this AP report published by CTV News.