Sánchez had high expectations of Monday’s visit by Scholz, who took over from chancellor Angela Merkel last month, with sources saying he saw their closer “ideological fit” as a chance to rebuild Madrid-Berlin relations.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz gave Spanish Socialist Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez no indication his left-leaning government is ready to
support a relaxation of EU fiscal rules, even as the two agreed on
Monday (17 January) to work closer together on European policies.
“The Chancellor and I note that we are entering a new phase in our
cooperation at European level,” Sánchez told reporters after their
meeting, citing a “shared vision with this new German government on
social and economic progress.”
“We coincide (in the opinion) that the fiscal rules are too complex
and hard to comply with”, especially in the context of the coronavirus
pandemic, he said. But he added that the two countries were not aligned
on how to change the rules, known as the European Stability and Growth
Pact.
Madrid hopes to convince Berlin to support a more relaxed set of
eurozone fiscal rules also backed by France and Italy, setting GDP to
debt reduction targets at a more realistic level and slowing the deficit
reduction drive.
But Scholz, who leads a “traffic light” coalition with the Greens and
liberal Free Democrats, said that while “Germany and Spain are close
friends” enjoying good relations, it was too early to review the fiscal
rules.
Scholz said the bulk of the €750 billion pandemic recovery fund,
which was made possible under the existing stability pact, still remains
to be spent.
European finance ministers were meeting on Monday to discuss when to return to the stability pact suspended during the pandemic.
Last month, after talks with French President Emmanuel Macron in
Paris, Scholz said growth and solid finances are no contradiction and
can be reached at the same time.
During the 2010 euro zone debt crisis, Germany was seen in Spain as a
leading member of the northern European “frugals” that imposed
financial restrictions and looked down on “spendthrift” southern
neighbours.
Even without immediate progress, the Sánchez government sees Scholz’s
visit as a start in breaking up of those two blocs, a Spanish senior
government official said.
Spain has not joined the EU fiscal reform proposal launched recently
by France and Italy, but still wants to change the debt limits set by
the current fiscal rules....
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