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Report: Qatar, Total Consortium to Build $1.5 bn Refinery

Energy-rich Qatar and a consortium led by Total of France have signed a joint venture agreement to build a $1.5 billion petroleum refinery in the Gulf state, local media reported on Monday.

The refinery will have a daily production capacity of 146,000 barrels of petroleum products, reports said.

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Bundesbank: Higher German Wages Would Harm Eurozone

A wide-scale rise in wages in Germany would not benefit other eurozone members, but would actually harm the single currency area as a whole, Bundesbank president Jens Weidmann said Monday.

"Given the relatively weak trading relations with peripheral European countries, they would barely profit from the reduced price competitiveness and increased consumption in Germany," Weidmann told the daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in an interview.

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EU Puts 2012 Spanish Deficit at 10.6% of GDP

The European Commission released on Monday final deficit and debt data for eurozone and EU states that was in line with upward revisions announced in late March by key countries such as Spain and France.

The figures showed that Spain posted a 2012 deficit of 10.6 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), including the cost to the state of recapitalizing broken banks.

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Bankers: Swiss 'Could Adapt' to Easing of Bank Secrecy

Swiss banks could adapt to a significant easing of their cherished secrecy practices, but only if global standards are created for information exchange to fight tax evasion, the head of the Swiss Bankers Association said in an interview published Sunday.

"Today, there is no global standard" for the automatic exchange of banking information, Patrick Odier told the NZZ am Sonntag weekly.

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IMF, Egypt Hope to Reach Loan Agreement in 'Weeks'

The International Monetary Fund and Egypt hope to conclude talks for a loan deal "in the coming weeks", they said in a joint statement Sunday.

The statement came after IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde met an Egyptian delegation in Washington this weekend that included Central Bank of Egypt Governor Hisham Ramez and Finance Minister Al-Mursi Hegazy.

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Strike Cancels Lufthansa Flights Monday

German flag carrier Lufthansa said that most of its domestic, European and long-haul flights would be cancelled on Monday due to strike action by ground personnel and cabin crews.

"Due to strike action announced for April 22, nearly all Lufthansa flights to German and European destinations must be cancelled," the airline announced in a statement on Saturday.

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IMF Steps Up Pressure on Advanced Economies

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde stepped up pressure Saturday on developed countries to both boost growth and undertake needed policy steps to put the crisis of five years ago firmly behind.

She said Europe, Japan and the United States had lagged on needed actions to restore global growth at a firm and sustainable pace.

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Austrians Disagree with Government on Banking Secrecy

Austrians disagree with their government over the need to maintain the country's banking secrecy, according to polls published Saturday which showed a majority in favor of lifting the controversial measure.

A Gallup poll for the daily Oesterreich found only 18 percent of Austrians wanted to maintain the strict banking secrecy policy.

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Iran Sees no Need for OPEC Emergency Meeting

Iran sees no need for an emergency meeting of the oil cartel OPEC over a recent drop in crude prices before the producers' annual session at the end of May, Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi said Saturday.

"No extraordinary meeting is needed as the May 31 meeting is coming up, and the price of oil had not gone below 100 dollars per barrel for a long time," Qasemi told reporters on the sidelines of an oil and gas trade fair in Tehran.

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G20 Pledge 'Ambitious' Steps to Spur Growth, Jobs

The Group of 20 economic powers pledged "ambitious" steps Friday to spur growth and job creation to get the crisis-scarred global economy back on track.

After talks in Washington that a U.S. official said focused much on the stagnation in Europe, the financial leaders of the world's biggest economies said the major crises had been overcome but growth was "too weak" and unemployment "too high."

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