Germany's finance minister supports pushing through a tax on financial transactions within the 17 member eurozone currency union in the face of opposition from nations such as the United Kingdom and the United States, two of the world's largest financial markets.

"We plan on setting up a financial transaction tax this fall, if need be only in the eurozone," German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble told the newspaper Bild am Sonntag.

Supporters of the move, such as Germany and France, believe a financial transaction tax would check speculation and slow the growth of bubbles while raising money that could be used to bail out banks in crisis situations.

'No consensus'

The European Union, however, remains divided over the measure with non-euro states such as Sweden and Britain expressing opposition. Opponents argue that such a tax would drive business to non-taxed foreign markets.

Timothy Geithner reportedly opposes such a tax

"There is no consensus," said Polish Finance Minister Jacek Rostowski during a meeting of his EU counterparts in Wroclaw over the weekend. "No one expects this element to be a crucial one in our attempts to stabilize the euro."

Although US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner called on eurozone states to leverage more money to combat the sovereign debt crisis, he reportedly opposed Schäuble's call for a financial transaction tax.

Geithner, the first US treasury secretary to attend a meeting of EU finance ministers, sparked controversy on Friday when he criticized the EU's handling of the debt crisis and called for more decisive action.

European Banks

EU finance ministers, meanwhile, agreed that Europe's banks needed to be strengthened in the face of the debt crisis. Ratings agency Moody's had downgraded two French banks, Credit Agricole and Societe Generale, on Wednesday due to their exposure to Greek debt.

In July, a stress test of European banks revealed a financing gap of 6 billion euro ($8 billion).

"From our perspective, we see a clear need for bank recapitalization," Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg said. "I think the International Monetary Fund spelled that out very clearly. The EU banking system needs better backstops and that's basically a matter of capital."

Author: Spencer Kimball (dpa, Reuters)

Editor: Andreas Illmer