PARIS — France wants an emergency European summit this week to produce a "strong message" of support for Greece, after a sharp warning from the International Monetary Fund that leaders must do more to keep debt troubles from poisoning the entire continent's economy.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy is flying to Berlin on Wednesday afternoon in an apparent last-minute bid to agree with Chancellor Angela Merkel on some kind of new aid to Greece.

Their meeting comes ahead of an European Union summit Thursday that Merkel has said won't produce anything "spectacular."

French Finance Minister Francois Baroin set a more urgent tone Wednesday morning. "There should be a strong message tomorrow, from the highest level," he said on France-Info radio.

"Whatever happens, it's to guarantee the stability of the eurozone," he said. He urged greater interest rate flexibility for Greece "to manage the tensions over sovereign debt over the long term."

European leaders have come under criticism for slow, piecemeal efforts to stem debt crises in several countries that use the euro.

The IMF released a report Wednesday urging European leaders to act more boldly to keep debt troubles from hurting the strongest members of the eurozone and stifling growth across the continent.

View Comments

There is "no consistent roadmap ahead," it warned, saying that could produce "possible significant regional and global spillovers."

It accused governments of "retrenchment, threatening to turn back the clock on economic and financial integration. ...These developments could easily jeopardize the recovery and cloud the medium-term growth outlook."

"Market participants remain unconvinced that a sustainable solution is at hand," the report said. "Limiting any further damage is now crucial."

Merkel said Tuesday that there would be no restructuring of Greece's debt or an agreement on eurobonds at Thursday's summit in Brussels. Instead, she said the summit must yield an agreement on a "controlled process of successive steps ... aiming at finally getting to the cause of the problem: The issue of reducing Greece's debt and the issue of raising its competitiveness."

Join the Conversation
Looking for comments?
Find comments in their new home! Click the buttons at the top or within the article to view them — or use the button below for quick access.