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Eurozone finance ministers meet in Dublin on Friday to finalize Cyprus bailout amid news that the country needs much more money than previously thought.

The meeting will review how Cyprus can raise its contribution to the bailout being put together by the EU and IMF.

The cost of the rescue has risen to 23 billion euros ($30 billion) from 17.5 billion euros, according to Cyprus’ creditors.

Meanwhile, Cyprus has loosened the capital controls it imposed last month.

Eurozone finance ministers meet in Dublin to finalize Cyprus bailout amid news that it needs much more money than first thought

Eurozone finance ministers meet in Dublin to finalize Cyprus bailout amid news that it needs much more money than first thought

In order to secure 10 billion euros from the EU and IMF, Cyprus will have to find the remaining 13 billion euros, 5.5 billion euros more than previously thought.

The finance minister of Luxembourg, Luc Frieden, said on Friday that Europe and the IMF could not increase their 10 billion euro share of the bailout.

“I believe the policy will be that the volume will remain at 10 billion [euros],” he told a German radio station.

Late on Thursday, a Cypriot government spokesman confirmed that one fundraising option being considered was the sale of some of the country’s gold reserves.

“The Cypriot government put various options forward, including this,” Christos Stylianides told a news conference.

Christos Stylianides blamed the gulf between the original bailout total and the new 23 billion figure on the previous administration and the time it took to negotiate a bailout, delays which pushed the cost of recapitalizing its banks much higher.

He accused former President Dimitris Christofias of failing to “take responsibility, and complete indecisiveness” in promptly negotiating a bailout.

Analysts said the increase in the cost of the bailout meant Cyprus faced huge new challenges.

Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, said that the “biggest burden of the increase in the bailout will fall on depositors and bank bond-holders, whose combined contribution will rise from an expected 5.8 billion euros to 10.6 billion euros.”

Under bailout terms agreed in March, depositors with more than 100,000 euros in savings will bear part of the cost of the rescue.

The bank sector on which much of the Cypriot economy was dependent is shrinking, and thousands of jobs are being lost.

Laiki Bank is being wound up and its healthy assets transferred to the Bank of Cyprus.

Late on Thursday, Cyprus relaxed restrictions that were imposed last month on access to accounts in order to head off a run on banks.

The capital controls, the first that any eurozone country has applied, were put in place when banks reopened on March 28 after they were closed until a bailout agreement.

A new decree, which will remain in place for seven days, lifts all restrictions on transactions under 300,000 euros, a move aimed at helping cash-starved domestic businesses which had difficulty paying suppliers and employees.

Also, the daily limit on transactions outside of Cyprus not requiring prior approval is raised from 5,000 to 20,000 euros.

However, the daily cash withdrawal limit of 300 euros stays in place.

Meanwhile, eurozone officials at the meeting are also due to review Slovenia’s growing problems.

There will be no discussion at the meeting of finance ministers, and the country will not make an application for bailout funds.

But Slovenia’s finance minister, Uros Cufer, is expected to present to EU and European Central Bank officials his plan to shore up the country’s finances.

Slovenia, which adopted the euro single currency in 2007, has been forced to recapitalize its main banks and the economy is struggling.

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Eurozone finance ministers are to hold a conference call to discuss a bailout for Spanish banks.

EU sources say Madrid could formally request financial assistance for its troubled banks this weekend.

So far Spain has denied reports that an announcement on a European rescue plan for its banks is close.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is estimating that Spain’s banks need a cash injection of at least 40 billion Euros ($50 billion).

The IMF said on Friday that a “stress test” showed Spain’s financial sector was well managed but “vulnerable”.

The eurozone finance ministers’ conference call is expected early on Saturday afternoon.

In an interview on Portuguese radio, European Central Bank Vice-President Vitor Constancio said: “It is expected that Spain will formulate a request for aid exclusively for banks recapitalization.

“There has to be an expression of will to have such a programme for Spanish banks, and one may hope it happens rather swiftly.”

Eurozone finance ministers are to hold a conference call to discuss a bailout for Spanish banks

Eurozone finance ministers are to hold a conference call to discuss a bailout for Spanish banks

Spain is under pressure from Brussels to act, possibly before the feared uncertainty that could follow next weekend’s Greek elections.

However on Saturday morning, the Spanish government restated its position that it does not need outside help to shore up its banks.

“There has been no change,” a spokeswoman from the economy ministry in Madrid told AFP news agency.

Spanish Prime Minister Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has insisted that any decision will come after the results of an independent audit on the Spanish banking system, which are due out within two weeks.

The audit will produce a figure of how much money, in total, is needed to prop-up Spain’s banks.

A rescue deal would see money passed first to the Spanish government and then to the troubled banks.

Because Madrid has already announced tough financial reforms it is likely that a deal would only carry limited conditions, our correspondent says, unlike the full-blown bailouts for Greece, Portugal and Ireland.

Reuters reported that eurozone deputy finance ministers would first hold a conference call on Saturday morning to discuss a Spanish request for aid.

The Eurogroup of finance ministers would then discuss the issue on another conference call, the news agency said, citing unnamed EU and German officials.

A downgrade of Spain’s creditworthiness by rating agency Fitch earlier this week has been seen by some as adding to the urgency of shoring up Spain’s finances.

European leaders have to make difficult decisions to steer the eurozone away from crisis, US President Obama said on Friday.

He said the US would support Europe as it implemented the hard solutions needed to solve the ongoing debt crisis.

He said a deep new recession in Europe would have an impact on the US economy.

Greece’s future in the eurozone was a matter for the Greek people, he said, but “further hardship” must be expected if the country chose to leave the euro.

Greeks will go to the polls on 17 June to try and end a political impasse that eurozone leaders say is harming Greece’s ability to tackle its economic crisis.