In spite of the roll-out of the vaccines, and the expected arrival of the EU’s recovery funds in the second half of the year, there is still a “substantial level of uncertainty”, said the Commission’s executive vice-president for Economy, Valdis Dombrovskis.
The European Commission said o
that the Stability and Growth Pact should remain suspended next year as
Europe’s economy needs additional stimulus to return to its pre-crisis
level.
With prospects of economic recovery still fragile, the Commission
wants to maintain activated in 2022 the escape clause of the Stability
and Growth Pact, suspending the rules that control national deficit and
debt levels.
Last March, at the onset of the pandemic, the EU executive took the unprecedented step of suspending the EU fiscal rules.
“One year on, the battle against COVID-19 is not yet won and we must
ensure that we do not repeat the mistakes of a decade ago by pulling
back support too soon,” said Commissioner for Economy Paolo Gentiloni.
“For 2022, it is clear that fiscal support will still be necessary:
better to err towards doing too much rather than too little,” he added.
Given the increasing number of covid-19 cases and the risk of a
double-dip recession, the support to the European economy will be
maintained “as much as is needed, for as long as is needed”, said on
Tuesday (27 October) commissioner for Economy, Paolo Gentiloni.
In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, the austerity paradigm
shared by Berlin, Brussels and Frankfurt forced an early withdrawal of
the fiscal stimulus. The result was a self-inflicted recession in Europe
in 2012.
The Commission will wait until May to confirm the decision to keep the escape clause activated in 2022.
Member states however needed to have a signal about whether the
Commission will maintain a loose stance, since they must in April submit
their stability and convergence plans, the fiscal path for the next
three years.
For that reason, the EU executive published on Wednesday a
communication stating that the level of economic activity in the EU or
euro area compared to pre-crisis levels (end-2019) would be the “key
quantitative criterion” to decide whether to prolong the suspension of
the Stability Pact.
“Therefore, current preliminary indications would suggest to continue
applying the general escape clause in 2022 and to deactivate it as of
2023,” the document added.
The latest Commission forecasts published in February projected that
the EU economy would regain pre-crisis levels only by the middle of next
year at the earliest.
The Commission said that it will monitor not only how the pandemic
evolves to adjust its economic response, but also other issues, such as
the interest rates of sovereign bonds, given the higher yields seen in
past weeks.
Dombrovskis told reporters the Commission would monitor “very
closely” the evolution of the rates and adjust its policies accordingly.
While the Commission favours keeping the stimulus flowing, it also
recommends countries with high debt levels to remain “prudent” with
their expenditure in 2022.
It did not detail at this stage the fiscal path for countries next year, as this will come in late May.
The European Union is likely to waive limits on government borrowing
again in 2022, given persistent uncertainties about the pace of economic
recovery once the coronavirus pandemic is contained, officials say.
“Exactly when to start the pivot in the type of measures and when to
start giving less to stimulus, and more to fiscal prudence, can’t be
answered today,” Gentiloni said.
But the EU executive said that, as the recovery evolves, the national
supportive measures should be more “timely, temporary and targeted.”
In other words, governments should channel their resources wisely
towards viable companies in the sectors hardest hit by the crisis, to
prevent debt from skyrocketing more than necessary, especially in
vulnerable countries such as Italy or Spain.
For these countries, the Commission especially stressed the
importance of making good use of the “unique window of opportunity”
offered by the Recovery and Resilience Facility, especially its €312.5
billion in grants aimed at spurring recovery.
These funds won’t add to existing national debt levels and will help
to reform the economies and boost their productivity, it added.
Stability Pact review
Last year’s suspension of the Stability and Growth Pact was triggered
only one month after the Commission launched the review of the fiscal
framework.
The EU executive plans to put forward a proposal after the summer.
The objective is to simplify the fiscal rules, to better incentivise
productive investment, especially in times of crisis, and to reflect the
new economic scenario, with high levels of indebtedness and lower
interest rates.
The reform of the fiscal rules is expected to trigger an intense
debate between Northern countries, which favour a stricter fiscal
stance, and Southern countries, which support a growth-oriented
framework.
Dombrovskis highlighted that the consensus will be “very important”,
to ensure that the end result is supported by all member states.
The European Fiscal Board proposed last year removing the deficit
threshold of 3% of GDP, and introducing a simpler spending rule. The
Board also proposed more nationally adjusted paths to reduce debt
levels, instead of the 60% target and the rigid adjustment rules
attached to it.
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