There is not much of a market just now for optimism... we face the worst economic crash in more than 100 years and potential climate change disaster. But the outcome of the marathon five day Brussels summit sets out a strikingly encouraging new direction for the European Union
The significance of the Brussels summit is not simply the sheer size
of the 1.2 trillion Euro stimulus to be given the EU economy but the
unprecedented scale of the collective borrowing the EU will
make on world financial markets to finance that recovery strategy. Of
the 750 billion Euro to be invested in post Covid-19 economic recovery,
an unprecedented 390 billion Euro will be in grants, not repayable
loans. To pay for the increased collective borrowing programme, the
summit also agreed – in principle – to new common EU taxes. These
include levies on plastics, on polluting imports and a digital tax.
Although details remain to be agreed this is a radical step towards a
common EU fiscal policy.
The EU heads of government also agreed on a more than 1 trillion Euro
seven-year EU budget. Opposition from some richer, northern European
states meant the proposed budget, though much bigger than the current
budget, is a little smaller than the Commission had originally proposed –
something the European Parliament may be reluctant to agree to.
The success of the European Council marathon reflects the remarkable
revival of a recently dormant Franco-German alliance. It also indirectly
reflects the political impact of Brexit. The opposition of the
so-called Frugal Four (Netherlands, Denmark, Austria and
Sweden) was massively weakened by the absence of the traditionally
super-sceptical UK government.
There was also strong support from the Italian and Spanish
governments for an ambitious new direction for EU economic strategy in
place of the discredited austerity obsessions of the past. The EU summit
reflected growing acceptance by public opinion that the scale of the
Covid crisis demands a radically different response.
The EU still faces the backwash from a looming global slump in
output, trade and employment. This can only exacerbate already widening
levels of wealth and social inequality with the worst impact being felt
by the young. Authoritarian and/or unstable populist regimes from China
and Russia to the United States, Brazil and India threaten a fragile
global order with trade conflict and worse.
The next immediate challenge facing the EU is to act on the promise
of a radical European Green New Deal. The proposals launched by the
European Commission in December 2019, outline a comprehensive framework
of regulations and legislation aimed at achieving the EU´s targets of
net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, and a 50% to 55% cut in emissions
from 1990 levels by 2030.
As the World Economic Forum has pointed out “Achieving this
transformative agenda and making Europe a leader in the global climate
transition requires a massive mobilization of public and private
investments. The Commission estimates that reaching the net-zero 2050
target requires at least €1 trillion of public and private investment
over the next decade.”
Much of the present global turbulence was prefigured in the financial
and banking crisis collapse in 2007/8. Only after much confusion and
dithering were measures taken by the EU institutions – notably by the
European Central Bank – to avert a disastrous monetary fragmentation of
the EU itself.
The strengthening of monetary union at that time was not matched by
greater economic or fiscal integration. Indeed, the grip of free market
austerity economics and visceral opposition to fiscal transfers to
poorer Member States remained as strong as ever in some key EU states –
notably Germany. The scandalous imposition of an economic straight
jacket on the Greek people a decade ago shook the very foundations of
the EU itself.
A little over a decade later and the political and ideological mood
across the EU is changing radically. Austerity economics are
discredited. Gross social and wealth inequality are seen as intolerable.
There is greater awareness across the EU of the fragility of the
natural world and how its gradual destruction incubates life-threatening
pandemics. Nowhere are these changes more striking than in Germany.
It is still too soon to predict with any confidence how the EU will
collectively respond to these wider global economic, social and climate
change challenges. But having taken the first significant steps towards
an eventual system of European Union economic governance since the era
of Jacques Delors we can take some encouragement from the outcome of the
Brussels summit.
The logic of the changes which were agreed by the five day Brussels
EU summit may, however, demand still further and more radical changes in
future. It against this background that the European Union will have to
decide whether the wind of change must also sweep through the
forthcoming Convention on the Future of Europe and lead to major new
reforms of the EU constitution itself.
Federal Trust
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