Based on the Commission forecast, the euro area deficit is projected to continue its decline in 2022 to 3.5% of GDP but is expected to widen in 2023 to 3.7% of GDP. Deficit levels vary significantly among Member States. Public debt in the euro area is expected to decline to 92% of GDP in 2023..
We welcome the Commission’s Communication and its Opinions on the
individual draft budgetary plans, published on 22 November. This
exercise continues to be key to the coordination of fiscal policy in the
euro area. We welcome that Croatia as a new euro area member from 1
January 2023 decided on a voluntary basis to submit a draft budgetary
plan for 2023.
The euro area economy continued its strong post-pandemic recovery in
2022, thanks to the swift policy action at national, EU and euro area
level, and in spite of the economic impact of Russia’s war of aggression
against Ukraine. At the same time, high energy price pressures, the
erosion of households' purchasing power, a weaker external environment
and tighter financing conditions are taking centre stage and heading
into 2023, economic activity is decelerating. The euro area and most
Member States are at the risk of experiencing a technical recession this
winter, with growth projected to return in spring. As the economy
adjusts to the rapid succession of two severe shocks, macroeconomic
forecasts continue to be surrounded by large uncertainty. The labour
market remains a source of resilience going forward, having benefitted
also from short term work schemes, including those supported by the EU
SURE mechanism, as well as the reforms and policies of the last decade.
Based on the Commission forecast, the euro area deficit is projected
to continue its decline in 2022 to 3.5% of GDP but is expected to widen
in 2023 to 3.7% of GDP. Deficit levels vary significantly among Member
States. The number of Member States with deficits above the 3% of GDP
Treaty reference value is expected to increase from 10 to 12 between
2022 and 2023 based on the Commission forecast. Public debt in the euro
area is expected to decline to 92% of GDP in 2023, decreasing gradually
from the 2021 level but remaining well above the pre-COVID-19-crisis
level.
The euro area fiscal stance is projected to be clearly expansionary
in 2022 and to be broadly neutral in 2023, according to the Commission,
but would turn expansionary if additional energy support measures were
to be enacted or current ones prolonged throughout 2023. Broad-based
fiscal stimulus to aggregate demand in 2023 is not warranted, the focus
being instead on protecting the vulnerable households and firms, while
maintaining the agility to adjust to the rapidly evolving situation, if
needed. We agree that fiscal policies should aim at preserving debt
sustainability as well as raising the growth potential in a sustainable
manner, thus also facilitating the task of monetary policy to ensure the
timely return of inflation to the ECB’s 2% medium-term target.
Given the urgent need to react to the energy price and inflation
shock, we have taken emergency measures that could be easily and rapidly
deployed. The direct budgetary cost of the measures in 2022 is
estimated at 1.3% of GDP in the euro area. Many of these measures have
been broad based and focused on energy prices, instead of targeted and
addressing incomes. In 2023, the cost is projected at 0.9% of GDP in the
euro area, and could increase significantly, if the already announced
measures were to be kept in place for the full year.
Going forward, as part of our response to mitigate the impact of high
energy prices, we are working to ensure that measures are more
efficient, better coordinated, while being fiscally affordable. We will
in 2023 examine our measures to ensure that they are targeted and
focused on vulnerable households and viable firms that are temporarily
exposed. A well calibrated two-tier energy pricing model* and other
schemes that achieve similar objectives, taking into account national
features, could be explored. Equally, our measures should support
further the reduction of energy dependence on Russia and accelerate the
decarbonisation of the economy. This requires preserving the price
signal to reduce energy consumption and incentivising investments in
energy efficiency, futureproof energy infrastructure, including
interconnections, storage and innovative renewable technologies. Given
the strong spill-overs in energy markets and for the euro area
economies, we will coordinate our measures to preserve the level playing
field and the integrity of the single market.
The Eurogroup agrees with the Commission’s assessment that all Member
States should progressively withdraw such measures as energy price
pressures diminish. In this regard many of the support measures
currently in place are due to expire early next year. We will continue
to coordinate our fiscal policy response in relation to energy support
in the euro area and will further discuss a common approach for
households, including reflecting on appropriate ways to wind down
support, at our upcoming meetings, building on the Commission input and
experience from euro area members.
We recall that the fiscal guidance for 2023 included in the Council
recommendation of 12 July 2022 differentiated between those Member
States with high and low/medium debt levels, depending on their fiscal
and economic situation. Member States with high debt levels should
pursue a prudent fiscal policy, in particular by limiting nationally
financed primary current expenditure growth. Low/medium debt Member
States should aim at a neutral fiscal policy stance. According to the
Commission assessment, most high debt Member States’ draft budgetary
plans are in line with the fiscal guidance contained in the Council
recommendation, the plan of Belgium is only partly in line, and the plan
of Portugal risks being only partly in line with the Council
recommendation, although we recognise the progress made on deficit and
debt-reduction in Portugal. According to the Commission assessment,
among the low/medium debt Member States, the draft budgetary plans of
Austria, Lithuania, Germany, Estonia, Luxembourg, the Netherlands,
Slovenia and Slovakia are only partly in line with the Council
recommendation. The Eurogroup invites the Member States to take the
necessary measures within the national budgetary process to ensure that
the 2023 budget is consistent with the Council recommendations, taking
into account economic circumstances. As the information on the energy
support measures is a key driver of this year’s assessment, we welcome
the Commission’s intention to closely monitor developments and provide
an update to inform our upcoming discussions.
We welcome that public investment expenditure has been on an upward
trend in the large majority of Member States, helped in part by the
Recovery and Resilience Facility and we recognise the need to further
expand investment expenditure in 2023 and beyond, especially to support
the green and digital transition, as well as energy security, including
through RePowerEU, once adopted. Moreover, we acknowledge that there is a
need to accelerate fiscal-structural reforms which would strengthen
potential growth, competitiveness and debt sustainability.
Council
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