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Abstract:Image copyrightEPAImage caption The French president said Europe was facing an unprecedented crisisE
Image copyrightEPAImage caption
The French president said Europe was facing an unprecedented crisis
EU leaders are meeting in their first face-to-face summit since the coronavirus crisis, with low expectations of a deal on a €750bn (£670bn) post-Covid stimulus package.
French President Emmanuel Macron said it was a “moment of truth” for Europe and the next hours would be decisive.
The main issue is how much of the recovery fund will be handed out in grants and how much in loans.
They also need to agree on a seven-year budget worth another €1.07 trillion.
Arriving for the talks, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said “the differences are very very big and I cannot say if we will find a solution this time”. It would be desirable, she said, but people had to remain realistic.
The Brussels meeting is due to continue on Saturday but EU leaders may need longer to reach a deal.
European Council President Charles Michel acknowledged that the talks would be “very difficult”, but Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said nobody should lose sight of the big picture - “we're faced with the biggest economic depression since the Second World War”.
Estonian Prime Minister Juri Ratas said “we need a fast, strong and united response to the pandemic to kick-start the European economy”.
Why is the fund so tricky?
Southern states including Italy and Spain want an urgent decision “not weakened by a lesser compromise”, in the words of Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte. They need to revive economies battered by a devastating pandemic that claimed 35,000 lives in Italy and a further 28,400 in Spain.
The Frankfurt-based European Central Bank has already forecast an 8.7% slump in the eurozone economy this year because of the pandemic. But economies that only recently pulled out of a financial crisis want grants rather than taking on further debt.
Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption
The Spanish prime minister has visited several European leaders to push his case for direct aid
The recovery plan, backed by France and Germany, for €500bn in grants and subsidies and €250bn in loans, is being resisted by several “frugal” Northern European countries, led by the Netherlands.
The EU recovery fund is already controversial as the money would be borrowed on the financial markets, to be paid back some time after 2027. It's made up of a number of different instruments, but the biggest part of it would be geared to supporting green and digital investment and reform. Some 30% of the funding could be tied to climate projects.
The frugal states, which include Austria, Sweden, Denmark and to some degree Finland, want some control over how the money is handed out. The Southern states say that will hold the process back.
There is also pressure to whittle down the size of the €750bn fund, so the solvency instrument devised to revive companies after lockdown could be under threat.
But Italian Economy Minister Roberto Gualtieri told the Corriere website that Rome “will fight hard not to modify” the structure of the recovery fund.
Why the rush?
Leaders have been criss-crossing Europe ahead of the summit in a bid to find a solution. Visiting Sweden, Spain's Pedro Sánchez warned: “If we delay the response, we delay the recovery and the crisis could get worse.”
Big choices face EU leaders on Covid recovery cash
The head of the European Central Bank, Christine Lagarde, has also urged the EU27 to move quickly on an “ambitious package”, warning that uncertainty remains high on the speed and scale of the economic rebound.
If the package of grants or loans is agreed, then France would be able to put €39bn of EU funding towards its own €100bn national recovery plan. Prime Minister Jean Castex said this week that €20bn of that would go towards insulating buildings, and converting cities to using bicycles.
A group of 150 scientists and celebrities joined climate activist Greta Thunberg on Thursday in signing an open letter urging EU leaders to end “all investments in fossil fuel exploration and extraction”.
As eurozone economic activity picks up and lockdowns are lifted, there are fears of a second surge.
The ECB has confirmed its emergency €1.35tn bond-buying programme is on track to last until June next year, to help governments, banks and businesses.
Are the Dutch out on a limb?
One of the main issues for EU leaders is whether any country can have a veto over money being handed out to a member state for recovery purposes.
Ahead of the summit, a French official said the Netherlands was the only one of the so-called frugal states seeking strict control of conditions for paying out funds.
Is that true? Certainly Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte insists on reforms to pensions, welfare and tax services in return for funding and he wants assurances that the money goes to modernising infrastructure and green investment.
But Finland too wants conditions attached to EU funding, both from the recovery pot and from the wider 2021-27 EU budget.
Skip Twitter post by @FinlandinEU
“The link between the Rule of Law and the ? budget must be strengthened. The RoL mechanism should be applied both to the MFF as well as to recovery actions.”
Minister @TyttiTup at todays video meeting of EU Affairs Ministers. pic.twitter.com/krATyVdeYD
— Finland in EU (@FinlandinEU) July 15, 2020
Report
End of Twitter post by @FinlandinEU
The task facing EU leaders is to agree not only on the size and terms of the recovery fund, but the overall EU budget too.
And Hungary's Viktor Orban has threatened to derail both the fund and the budget if any payments are linked to a member state's rule of law.
His ruling Fidesz party has been suspended by the big European People's Party bloc for clamping down on media and civil society.
“We could veto it because it needs a unanimous decision. Hungary could say no,” Mr Orban said last week.
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