The European Parliament on Monday (7 September) requested to bolster the EU’s seven-year budget with around €110 billion and legally binding commitments on the introduction of new levies to finance the bloc’s €750 billion stimulus against the COVID-19 crisis, EURACTIV has learnt.
MEPs held a new round of talks yesterday on the EU’s long-term budget
for 2021-2027 with the Council of Ministers, the institution
representing the EU’s 27 member states.
Known as the multi-annual financial framework, or MFF, the budget
discussions focused on new own resources to finance the recovery fund
that was put in place by EU leaders in July to fight the ongoing
economic crisis caused by the pandemic.
The European Commission also took part in the three-way budgetary talks.
Negotiators are racing against the clock, with an objective of
getting the first EU money flowing as of 1 January. But sources close to
the negotiation said that the discussions were “constructive” even
though they were “quite intensive”.
The two sides discussed topping up the €1,074 billion MFF and the
governance of the Recovery and Resilience Facility, the main pillar of
the €750 billion recovery fund, which are both part of the July deal
worth €1.8 trillion in total.
Negotiators also exchanged views on green aspects of the EU budget
deal, including a commitment by EU leaders to ensure that 30% of the
bloc’s funds are dedicated to climate-friendly projects.
One of the main bones of contention is a Parliament request to
bolster the EU budget to finance areas like the Erasmus education
programme or Horizon Europe, the EU’s innovation and research programme.
Parliament sources said that their priority is to discuss “content”
and priorities, and they did not put on the table any figure. But
officials estimated that their demands amount to €110 billion.
“The room for manœuvre is very limited on this,” said a Council official.
Representatives of EU member states believe that the Parliament’s
demand is hard to swallow, considering that the EU has now the
biggest-ever volume of funds available (€1.8 trillion) after the July
marathon summit.
Another outstanding issue is how to pay for the €750 billion
corona-stimulus. The Parliament is pushing for a legally-binding
declaration by member states on the introduction of new levies and taxes
to finance the unprecedented amount that the bloc will borrow from the
markets.
But a Council official said it was “a big ask” to request a legal
commitment when there are no formal proposals from the Commission on the
table.
“You wouldn’t buy a car you haven’t seen,” the Council official said,
referring to the lack of clarity on the carbon border tax project, or
an expanded Emission Trading System, the EU’s cap-and-trade scheme for
greenhouse gas emissions.
Instead, member states are ready to explore ways of beefing up the
wording used by EU leaders in their July agreement, which included a
timetable to introduce new levies.
On the bright side, EU sources said an agreement would be easier to
find on the governance of the recovery fund. Experts from both sides
will try to find a formula to give the Parliament a bigger say in this
area, the sources said.
Hungary pushing for package deal
The Council also insisted that the MFF and recovery fund should come
as a package, because part of the recovery money will be channeled
through the EU budget. The Austrian rebate for instance, which was key
to win Vienna’s approval in July, is based on grants approved in the
recovery fund, sources said.
The Parliament however wants greater negotiating space to beef up the
MFF. For that reason, MEPs suggested to reach an agreement now on the
recovery fund (‘Next Generation EU’) and the EU’s new budgetary ceiling
that will be put in place to finance it. That, in turn, would allow more
time to negotiate higher figures for Erasmus and Horizon Europe.
The Parliament’s chief negotiator and chair of the Budget committee,
Johan van Overtveldt (ECR, Belgium), declined to comment at this
stage. But EURACTIV understands that the Parliament is willing to
accelerate negotiations on the recovery fund in order to allow enough
time for national parliaments to approve an increase in the EU’s
spending ceiling to finance the stimulus.
Parliament sources recalled that there’s no legal obligation to
negotiate the MFF and the recovery fund together, and it is rather “a
political link”.
A major political stumbling block in this regard is the Parliament’s
insistence to make the disbursement of EU funds conditional on the
respect for the Rule of Law.
Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban succeeded in watering down
those “conditionality” rules during the July summit. And Budapest is now
pushing to negotiate the Rule of Law clause as part of a wider package
in order to prevent MEPs from tightening up the text during budgetary
talks.
That would give the Hungarian parliament an effective right of veto
over the whole €750 billion recovery fund if MPs dislike the Rule of Law
text.
EURACTIV
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