Ensuring effective recovery spending is a high-stakes challenge for the EU, with the potential for derailment because of fuzzy objectives and overloaded procedures...should work with member countries to identify limited policies that will maximise the impact of EU investment...
The European Union’s plan
for aiding recovery in member states hit by the coronavirus crisis has
been rightly hailed as a major breakthrough for the bloc. But there is
much less clarity on the plan’s economic aims, its priorities and the
content of the contractual arrangements it should entail between the EU
and member countries. The plan’s main plank, the Recovery and Resilience
Facility (RRF) is widely seen as a short-term Keynesian stimulus. The
EU debt is expected to be repaid through contributions from member
states, but this has not stopped the resulting transfers as being seen,
including by national governments, as money from heaven. There has also
been controversy over the conditions attached to grants and loans.
Such fuzziness over objectives
and overloaded procedures can derail the RRF. The EU needs to make an
effort to provide clarity from the outset and put the plan on the right
track. It should acknowledge and emphasise that the main goal of the RRF
is not to contribute to immediate relief or a Keynesian stimulus, but
to foster structural transformation, especially in less-advanced and
harder-hit member states.
The EU should hold
back from trying to impose through overall policy conditionality its
reform agenda on the member states. Instead, there should be a
narrow-conditionality approach in which reforms that strongly complement
intended investments should be identified and bundled with that
investment. A grant aimed at encouraging decarbonisation in the
transport sector, for example, would, be made conditional on the
elimination of transport fuel subsidies. Therefore, in national recovery
and resilience plans, each bundle of investments and reforms should be
focused on the limited set of policy measures that need to be
implemented to maximise the impact of EU-financed investment.
Meanwhile, complementarity across
objectives should be addressed through a dialogue with each member
state on the sectoral allocation of EU funding and the overall
architecture of their recovery and resilience plans. And the EU should
emphasise when relevant the cross-border dimension of investment plans
and find ways to encourage member states to cooperate on the design and
the implementation of their plans.
Recommended citation
Pisani-Ferry, J. (2020) ‘European Union recovery funds: strings attached, but not tied up in knots’, Policy Contribution 2020/19, Bruegel
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