If the EU's new recovery program succeeds, it may ultimately pave the way for the establishment of a fiscal union. But if the EU funds fail to deliver on the plan's stated goals, or if political interests prevail over economic necessity, federal aspirations will be dashed for a generation.
To help their pandemic-hit economies recover, European Union leaders agreed
in July to borrow €750 billion ($876 billion) to finance €390 billion
in grants and €360 billion in loans to the bloc’s member states. The
program, called Next Generation EU, was rightly hailed as a major
breakthrough: never before had the EU borrowed to finance expenditures,
let alone transfers to member states.
But the program and its
Recovery and Resilience Facility,
which will disburse most of the funds, amount to a high-risk gamble. If
the plan succeeds, it will surely pave the way to further initiatives,
and perhaps ultimately to a fiscal union alongside the monetary union
established two decades ago. But if the program fails to deliver on
stated goals, if political interests prevail over economic necessity,
federal aspirations will be dashed for a generation.The first question
regards the size of the program. Although €390 billion in grants may
look like a large sum of money, it actually amounts to less than 3% of
EU GDP, to be spent over several years.
Jason Furman, a former chairman of US President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers,
reckons
that the US government’s fiscal response to the 2008 global financial
crisis amounted to $1.6 trillion, or about 10% of GDP. That was 3-4
times more, in response to a much milder shock.
On the whole, therefore,
individual countries remain in charge of warding off the pandemic blow.Actually, the fiscal support already committed by leading EU member states represents 7-12% of national GDP
– and significantly more is in the pipeline. Nonetheless, the EU grants
could make a big difference for some countries still reeling from the
euro crisis. Transfers net of expected repayments should be worth 4% of GDP for Spain, 5% for Portugal, and 8% for Greece, according to ECB calculations. This is more than the 2.6% of GDP in aid
that the US granted to Europe under the Marshall Plan. If invested
shrewdly, such amounts could change the recipient countries’ economic
fate. The next question concerns speed. In the spring of this year, EU
economies entered free fall. They have now recovered from their troughs,
but are still operating at about 5% below capacity.
Given the new wave of infections, and rising unemployment, the
immediate issue is whether these economies’ growth momentum will endure
or weaken.
Should Europe’s
recovery falter, a vicious circle of precautionary savings and worsening
expectations could ensue, possibly leading to a double-dip recession.
The appropriate strategy is therefore to make budgetary support
contingent on the pace of the recovery. Money should be available now and disbursed quickly in case of need.
But
make no mistake: the EU support package will come only later. Before
its money can start to be spent, the bloc must agree on priorities,
procedures, and conditions, which inevitably takes time. Less than 10%
of the money is expected be paid out in 2021, according to
the ECB.
As matters stand, therefore, responsibility for sustaining the recovery
remains with the EU’s member states.
Even in 2022, it will be too early
to pass the baton to the EU and wind down national stimulus packages.
The temptation of early fiscal consolidation must be resisted. Rather
than seeking to engineer a Keynesian cyclical demand boost, the goal of
Next Generation EU is in fact structural: to chart a new economic
development path. The scheme aims to increase economic resilience,
support the transition to a carbon-free economy, accelerate
digitalization, and mitigate the social and regional fallout from the
pandemic crisis. That brings us to the third question: not how quickly
EU money will reach southern Europe, but whether it will help tackle
long-standing curses, such as low productivity, structural unemployment,
inequality, and reliance on carbon-intensive technologies.The EU is clear on this point, and the European Commission recently set out
the type of investment and reform plans member states are expected to
devise in order to access the money.
Although national governments will
have the initiative in drawing up plans, they will have to return to the
drawing board if the EU deems the projects too vague or soft to be
effective. This could prove politically explosive in countries such as
Italy, whose prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, fought for days and nights
at the July summit against northern EU members’ efforts to condition
financial support on predefined reforms. The proposed compromise
is sensible but fragile. Member states’ plans will be rated against
their stated goals and overall objectives such as growth, job creation,
and resilience, while disbursement will be conditional on recipient
countries achieving agreed milestones and targets.
This arrangement
involves neither political conditionality (“first reform your pensions,
then we can talk”) nor rubber-stamping (“here’s the money, please tell
us what you do with it”). Rather, it is meant to be a contract whereby
money is intended to serve certain goals, and the EU checks that the
conditions to achieve them are in place. But heated controversies are to
be expected if the Commission does its job, rejects ineffective plans,
and delays disbursements when milestones and targets are not met. The
risk is that the process ends up in a bureaucratic squabble that the
public cannot decipher, but which provides ammunition to populists.
To
avoid falling into this trap, the EU will have to strike the right
balance between intrusiveness and indulgence. It should select for each
recipient a few targets and criteria that are specific, clear, and
nearly indisputable; and it should be ready to fight for these
yardsticks. It will also need to scrutinize the allocation of funds, and
quickly raise a red flag in case of embezzlement. As Bruegel’s Guntram Wolff has pointed out, evidence of corruption would be lethal for Europe’s grand ambitions.Thomas
Edison famously said that genius is 1% inspiration and 99%
perspiration. Inspiration was behind the July decision. Now, Europe
should start sweating for a good cause.
Project Syndicate
© Project Syndicate
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