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Brown hails EU recovery package Brown hails EU recovery package
(19 minutes later)
Gordon Brown has said European leaders have agreed to back an "ambitious and co-ordinated" recovery plan to help their economies through the downturn.Gordon Brown has said European leaders have agreed to back an "ambitious and co-ordinated" recovery plan to help their economies through the downturn.
The package, negotiated at an EU summit in Brussels, will see 200bn euros of funding - equivalent to 1.5% of the EU total output, poured into economies.The package, negotiated at an EU summit in Brussels, will see 200bn euros of funding - equivalent to 1.5% of the EU total output, poured into economies.
Mr Brown said measures would include "judicious" tax cuts and acceleration of public spending projects.Mr Brown said measures would include "judicious" tax cuts and acceleration of public spending projects.
The agreement "answered" criticism that the EU was not united on the issue. The PM's economic policy has come under fire from leading German politicians.
'Good news'
Finance minister Peer Steinbruck called the UK government's decision to cut VAT levels and raise borrowing to record levels to support the weakening economy as "crass" and "breathtaking."
But Mr Brown said that "whatever comments had been made in the last few days", the agreement over the need for a huge stimulus package showed that the EU was "wholly united".
He described the agreement as "good news for the UK and good news for Europe".
The measures were a rejection of calls for politicians to "do nothing and let the recession take it course", he added.
The stimulus plan will include tax cuts, reduction in regulation, support for small business and anticipated further reductions in interest rates.
The Foreign Office has confirmed that Britain's ambassador in Berlin, Sir Michael Arthur, telephoned the German finance ministry on Thursday to complain about Mr Steinbruck's comments.
A spokesman would not give details of the call other than to say that the ambassador had made it clear that "we fundamentally disagreed with the comments made by Peer Steinbruck".