Epidemiologists advocate the use of a ‘circuit-breaker’
lockdown to fight the pandemic. The economic policy response should
become the ‘circuit-maker’ to speed up the recovery once the pandemic is
under control. Europe’s leaders are well aware of this need, but we are
concerned that institutional inertia will act as a drag.
Next Generation EU, the unprecedented fiscal package adopted by the
European Council this summer, is a commendable endeavour. Its aim is to
boost public investment with a three-pronged objective: (i) to boost
aggregate demand; (ii) to support the most hard-hit countries in the
pursuit of cohesion; and (iii) to strengthen the economic growth
potential of the Union (e.g. Verwey et al. 2020, European Commission
2020a, 2020b, European Council 2020).
Indeed, Next Generation EU is about more than supplementing demand in
the short and medium run. It is the EU’s ‘Roosevelt moment’ (Codogno,
2020), aiming to not only compensate the near-term collapse in demand,
but also promote deep structural reforms and reallocate resources to
raise the economy’s growth potential and achieve common policy
objectives such as climate control.1
The bulk of the funds are channelled through the Recovery and
Resilience Facility. Each country has a right to claim a fraction of the
total pot for grants and loans, based on a prior agreed formula relying
on a set of objective indicators. Figure 1 depicts the allocation of
Next Generation EU funding over the Member States, broken down into
grants and loans. Figure 2 shows the estimated Next Generation EU cash
flows over time, together with the cashflows from the European
Commission’s Support to mitigate Unemployment Risks in an Emergency
(SURE) programme and the support from the European Stability Mechanism
(ESM).
Figure 1 Next Generation EU: Estimate of overall amounts as a percentage of national GNI
Figure 2 Next Generation EU: Estimates of cash flows in billions of euros
Projects need to fulfil certain conditions and should be reform- and
investment-related, based on guidelines provided by the Commission. As
such, projects should come as a complement to structural reform plans.
This approach has a strong macroeconomic rationale. Yet, it is
subject to a number of risks, common to most EU policy initiatives that
rely on countries submitting their own plans (even when subject to
coordination such as the European Semester), and of which some are
acknowledged to have long plagued the effectiveness of EU projects:
- The additionality of the plans may turn out limited as countries
use EU funds to finance existing projects or projects that would have
been undertaken anyway. In that case, support funding can at most limit
the debt increase of countries with limited fiscal space.
- Countries could shun the take-up of conditional loans (Spain and
Portugal have already hinted at that), preferring grants and market
loans without strings attached. The latter are cheap even for the worst
affected countries owing to risk sharing via the ECB’s quantitative
easing and the common bond issuance of the EU package itself.
- Countries have limited administrative absorption capacity of
projects: past experience shows that money is left on the table, because
countries are unable to initiate sufficient adequate proposals which,
at any rate, may clash with capacity constraints among private
contractors or crowd out other viable activities.
- Countries may be tempted to channel EU funding to social transfers
or tax cuts or to launch pet infrastructure projects that are not
financially viable or have a purely domestic-politics dimension. These
should be left for national decision making and budgets, or not
undertaken at all.
- Spreading funds too thinly over small projects without a common
strategy could lead to resources being misallocated. With the widespread
increase in debt-to-GDP ratios across European countries impinging on
income-producing future generations, the last thing we need is waste.
The EU is in dire need of pan-European infra-structure projects,
pan-European meaning involving two or more countries and yielding
spillovers from which the entire EU can benefit. Examples are high-speed
railways, power grids with sufficient capacity to transport the
electricity generated by renewable energy, infrastructure for hydrogen
(produced by renewable energy to replace carbon energy), digital
investments, but also human capital and mobility.
The bottom-up nature of this EU endeavour has a rationale: who else
knows the needs of a specific country or region better than local
administrators and technocrats? However, because of the bottom-up
planning and submission of projects, these are unlikely to give
sufficient weight to the EU-wide spillover effects inherent to large
infrastructure projects which may therefore turn out underweighted.
Moreover, the scale of such investments is too large for national
administrations to handle on their own. Not only do individual countries
fail to internalise positive spill-overs, but they also find it
inherently complicated to work together on large trans-border projects. A
telling example is the Dutch ‘Betuwe’ rail track from Rotterdam to the
German border, which has already been waiting for years for completion
of the German part of the line, effectively leading to a huge waste of
transportation capacity. In a way, the subsidiarity principle would
argue for top-down rather than bottom-up in the case of large
infrastructure projects.
Therefore, the EU (Commission and other European institutions), not
primarily national governments, should initiate such genuine
pan-European infrastructure projects that transcend national interests.
The emphasis should be on projects with a high impact on sustainable
growth (renewable energy, human capital, green mobility) that have
broader spill-overs and a strong ‘common good’ characteristic and for
which national governments are ill equipped.
Next Generation EU should be about providing the funding and
direction for pan-EU infrastructure projects. It needs to become the
‘circuit maker’ that brings the EU economy together and better positions
it in the post-corona world economic order.
References
Codogno, L (2020), “Did Europe just experience its ‘Hamiltonian Moment’? No, it is probably more Roosevelt than Hamilton”, The International Economy, Summer 2020.
Codogno, L and P J van den Noord (2020), “Going fiscal? A stylised model with fiscal capacity and a Eurobond in the Eurozone”, Amsterdam Centre for European Studies, SSRN Research Paper 2020/03.
European Commission (2020a), “Identifying Europe’s recovery needs” SWD(2020) 98 final/2, 27 May.
European Commission (2020b), “Guidance to Member States, Recovery and Resilience Plans” Commission Staff Working Document, SWD(2020) 205 final, 17 September,
European Council (2020c), “Conclusions”, EUCO 10/20 CO EUR 8 CONCL 4, 21 July,
European Fiscal Board (2020), Annual Report 2020, Brussels.
Van den Noord, P J (2020), “Mimicking a Buffer Fund for the Eurozone”, World Economics Journal 21(2): 249-281.
Verwey, M, S Langedijk and R. Kuenzel (2020), "Next Generation EU: A recovery plan for Europe", VoxEU.org, 9 June.
Endnotes
1 These are essential changes at the national level. Ideally, these
should be complemented with a further completion of the EMU, such as
with a central fiscal capacity (Codogno and Van den Noord 2020, European
Fiscal Board 2020, Van den Noord 2020).