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Originally published June 25, 2012 at 4:42 AM | Page modified June 25, 2012 at 9:41 AM

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Germany rebuffs Obama's economic advice, cites U.S. deficit

Germany's finance minister is rejecting U.S. President Barack Obama's calls on Europe to move faster in fighting its debt crisis, telling him to get the American deficit under control instead.

The Associated Press

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Good for Schaeuble. Absolutely correct and justified in telling Barry the Obscurer to... MORE
The EU is coming apart at the seams. If you remove Germany from the total numbers it... MORE
I think Germany is the one that should be giving advice. Blame the Repubs.........ar... MORE

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BERLIN —

Germany's finance minister is rejecting U.S. President Barack Obama's calls on Europe to move faster in fighting its debt crisis, telling him to get the American deficit under control instead.

Wolfgang Schaeuble told public broadcaster ZDF in an interview late Sunday that "people are always very quick at giving others advice."

He says: "Mr. Obama should first of all take care of reducing the American deficit, which is higher than in the eurozone."

Obama and other leaders fear an escalating crisis in Europe could drag down the world economy.

The 17-nation eurozone is struggling to overhaul its institutions and streamline its decision making to restore investors' confidence. The bloc's debt relative to its economic output stands at about 80 percent, while it is about 100 percent in the U.S.

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