Achieving the European Union’s climate goals and decoupling from Russian energy will require a massive increase in green public spending, which will be difficult when EU fiscal rules requiring fiscal consolidation are reinstated.
The two major proposals to address the conflicting goals of fiscal
consolidation and increased green public investment needs are a possible
new European climate investment fund and a green golden rule. The
latter would exclude any increase in net green public investment from
the fiscal indicators used to measure compliance with fiscal rules, for
countries with sound public finances.
An EU climate fund and a well-designed green golden rule would be
equivalent in terms of project selection, implementation and control
procedures.
If the climate fund does not involve redistribution across member
states, then the treatment of related spending and consequent borrowing
in national fiscal indicators and in the EU’s fiscal framework would be
the same. New regulations would be needed to set up both the climate
fund and the green golden rule. Special legislation would be needed to
exempt the subsequent climate expenditures from EU fiscal rules in both
cases.
A climate fund financed by EU borrowing with redistributive effects
across countries would likely result in the exclusion of the fund’s
activities from national fiscal indicators and EU fiscal rules without
any legislative changes. There are question marks about the desirability
and political feasibility of redistribution across the EU for climate
purposes.
An EU climate fund, irrespective of whether or not it involves
redistribution, would mainly benefit southern and eastern EU countries.
An instrument is needed to foster green public investment in western and
northern EU countries as well. The green golden rule would be such an
instrument.
While there are some pragmatic options to mimic a green golden rule
in the current EU fiscal framework, such as amending the so-called
‘investment clause’ and adjusting the medium-term objective for the
structural balance, ultimately, elements of the 2011 Six-Pack
legislation and the 2012 Treaty on Stability, Coordination and
Governance should be revised to include a green golden rules....
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