Money from the EU’s €800 billion coronavirus recovery fund could start flowing to member states before summer. Still, investors are “concerned” about the speed of the implementation of the EU’s joint stimulus programme, the chief of the European Stability Mechanism said on Monday (15 February).
“I hear that investors are concerned about the speed of the
implementation of the recovery and resilience plans and facility,” ESM
managing director, Klaus Regling, said following a Eurogroup
videoconference on Monday.
“They are worried that delays might affect negatively growth rates,”
said Regling who manages the EU’s bailout fund put in place in the wake
of the 2010 eurozone debt crisis.
“And I think in that sense, it’s good that the relevant regulation
has been adopted now, and that is good for market confidence,” he added.
Euro area finance ministers discussed ongoing efforts to address the
economic fallout of the pandemic, in particular how to support viable
companies.
The EU concluded last week the adoption of the Recovery and
Resilience Facility, the €672.5 billion instrument that will mobilises
the bulk of the recovery fund.
Once the RRF is published in the Oficial Journal of the EU on 18
February, member states will be able to submit their national recovery
plans to unlock their share of the stimulus programme.
The first plans are expected by March. Once submitted, the European
Commission will have two months to give its approval, and an additional
four weeks are needed for member states’ blessing (by qualified majority
in the Council).
As a result, national governments will not start receiving the first
tranche of payments at least until June (13% of their envelope once the
plans are approved).
The EU’s economy commissioner, Paolo Gentiloni, however said that
“definitely we can be able to deliver first disbursements before
summer,” although he admitted that it would be a “challenge”.
He explained that the time required for the Commission assessment
“could be shortened” without affecting the quality of the evaluation, as
it is in everyone’s interest to have the programme up and running as
soon as possible.
Member states should include more specific milestones and targets and
more ambitious reforms in their recovery plans to access the
unprecedented stimulus package to combat the COVID pandemic, the
European Commission warned on Tuesday (19 February).
But in order to achieve a more ambitious calendar, EU governments
should accelerate the finalisation of their investment and reform plans.
In addition, member states must have concluded by the end of this
semester the ratification of the EU’s new budgetary ceiling, required
for borrowing the €800 billion needed to finance the recovery fund.
Concerns about the implementation of EU’s unprecedented recovery fund
came as the Europeans also started their vaccination campaigns on the
wrong foot.
Some Eurogroup ministers already questioned the speed of the Recovery and Resilience Facility.
“I see there are blockages and that all this is too slow, that we
need to accelerate and that if we want to emerge from the economic
crisis in the best conditions, European money must arrive as quickly as
possible,” French finance minister, Bruno Le Maire, told the Financial
Times in January.
The initial disbursements of Europe’s joint stimulus will coincide
with the decision by summer on whether the bloc will maintain the
Stability and Growth Pact suspended in 2022.
If the EU’s rules controlling national deficit and debt levels remain
on hold next year, member states will have the space needed for the
extra spending to overcome the consequences of the pandemic.
According to the Commission’s latest forecast, the European economy
is expected to recover to its pre-pandemic levels by mid-2022.
The Commission however did not factor in the impact of the recovery fund in its winter forecast.
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