DAVOS, Jan 26: UK Prime Minister David Cameron launched a stinging attack on his European partners on Thursday, slamming the eurozone as uncompetitive and branding a planned transaction tax “madness”.

The British premier took the stage on the second day of the World Economic Forum in Davos, the annual Alpine get-together for the global business elite, and revived his simmering feud with the ailing single-currency bloc.

In a speech destined to delight his own euro-sceptic party back home and infuriate France’s President Nicolas Sarkozy, Cameron scornfully dismissed French-led plans to introduce a tax on all financial trades.

“Even to be considering this at a time when we are struggling to get our economies growing is quite simply madness,” he declared.

“Of course it’s right that the financial sector should pay their share. In the UK we are doing exactly that through our bank levies and stamp duty on shares. And these are options which other countries can adopt,” he added.

“That showed a Financial Transactions Tax could reduce the GDP of the EU by 200 billion euros, cost nearly 500,000 jobs and force as much as 90 percent of some markets away from the EU.”

France, Germany and other EU nations could of course go ahead with a tax without Britain, but Cameron broadened his attack to encompass the whole economic management of the debt-ridden, low-growth eurozone.

He echoed a call made on the same stage on Wednesday by Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel for more measures to boost growth, but went further, calling for a root-and-branch reform of how the eurozone is managed.

Cameron also said a shared currency must be backed with a central bank ready to act as a lender of last resort, deep economic integration between member states and a system of fiscal transfers to offset imbalances.

“Currently, it’s not that the eurozone doesn’t have all of these, it’s that it doesn’t really have any of these,” he declared.

In December, Sarkozy reportedly snapped that — as Britain is not part of the single currency — Cameron should shut up about its affairs.

Instead, the British leader listed the measures he would take if he were seeking to tackle the debt crisis — quickly oversee a Greek debt write-down, recapitalise banks and set up a financial firewall to protect states.

“That’s what would make the clear difference in sentiment and outlook,” he said, in a clear rebuke to Merkel’s cautious strategy of incremental reform and her ruling out of pooling eurozone sovereign debt.—AFP

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