Amid doubts around the implementation of the €800 billion recovery fund, European Commission and experts stress that the EU instrument is not a US-like emergency stimulus but an investment tool for the medium-term to transform the European economy.
Last July, every EU leader agreed on describing the recovery fund as a
“historic deal”, built on the unprecedented joint issuance of €800
billion of EU bonds.
But the slow process of finalising all the details of the fund,
preparing national recovery plans and green-lighting the massive
borrowing in national parliaments sparked concerns among investors and
criticism in national capitals.
“We have lost too much time. China has resumed its growth, the US is
booming, the EU must remain in the race,” French finance minister, Bruno
Le Maire said recently.
Finance ministers of Germany, France, Italy, and Spain urged member
states on Wednesday (28 April) to submit their recovery plans and
pressed the European Commission to speed up the assessment of the
investment and reform proposals.
By Friday (6 May), only half of EU governments have submitted their
investment and reform proposals to access their part of the funds,
although they were expected by 30 April. Meanwhile, seven member states
must still ratify the Own Resources Decision to make it possible to
borrow the €800 billion in the markets.
In addition, the European stimulus has been dwarfed by the
never-ending impetus of the Biden Administration, who have already put
forward the fifth spending package for the US economy.
In recent weeks, EU institutions and finance ministers have rushed to
point out that the comparison with the US efforts is unfair because EU
governments had already approved national measures and European welfare
programmes are more robust than on the other side of the Atlantic.
“Critically, a focus on scale understates the size and
transformational nature of the support being provided, particularly for
the EU economy,” Eurogroup president Paschal Donohoe wrote in the
Financial Times in March.
The European Commission has received national Recovery and Resilience
Plans (RRP) from 14 countries to access the bloc’s €750 billion
recovery fund. 13 of the EU’s 27 member states are still missing from
the list.
The Commissioner for Economy, Paolo Gentiloni, emphasised that the
recovery fund, in particular its main pillar, the Recovery and
Resilience Facility, is not “emergency money”, given that the first
response given by member states was very strong and other EU instruments
were approved before, including the SURE scheme to support workers.
Gentiloni explained that “this common money is for quality growth, it
should be connected to green and digital transitions and reforms”.
Maria Demertzis, deputy director of Bruegel think tank, agreed that
the recovery fund is not a stimulus comparable to the checks sent to
citizens and authorities by the Biden Administration.
She argued that the European fund “is a medium-term investment
instrument, not a fiscal stabilisation tool, and it is important to
remember that because people talk about it as if it was an ordinary
stimulus”.
Opportunities
The unprecedented Recovery and Resilience Facility offers primarily three opportunities in the short, medium and long term.
In the near future, it could provide resources to impulse Europe’s
leadership in the green transition and help the bloc catch up in the
digital race.
Ángel Talavera, head of European Economics at Oxford Economics,
however, warned that “there is a lot of uncertainty about the economic
impact of a recovery plan of this kind. It will take many years to see
what results it will bring”, for example in the digital transformation.
French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire and German Finance Minister
Olaf Scholz unveiled their national recovery and resilience plan at a
joint press conference Tuesday (27 April) ahead of the indicative 30
April deadline set by the European Commission.
In the medium term, the Facility could represent the ‘carrot’ to
implement long-delayed reforms in member states, for example, to
transform the labour market in Spain or the justice system in Italy. The
European Semester, the EU mechanism to coordinate national economies,
did not provide enough incentives in past years because it lacked teeth,
experts said.
In a recent paper, the Centre for the European Policy Studies
highlighted that the RRF “has the potential to steer the implementation
of structural reforms”.
“The disbursement of the RRF funds is linked to the completion of
targets and milestones set in the National Recovery and Resilience
Plans, which are defined in line with the structural reforms identified
by the country-specific recommendations (CSRs),” the paper said.
But Demertzis was sceptical about the implementation of major reforms
with high political costs and recommended “not to expect too much” from
governments. She said that “emphasis” would be given to reforms linked
to the green and digital agendas, although some “first steps” would be
taken in labour, pensions and other difficult areas.
“This would be already a good thing because it is important to remain realistic,” she added.
The European Commission could find it difficult to transfer the first
tranche of the recovery funds to all member states according to its
calendar, as most plans are expected to be approved at the same time and
there will be limited capacity to borrow from the markets.
In the long run, the RRF, which will be operative until 2026, could
turn into the permanent fiscal instrument the EU is missing to deal with
economic shocks, as the European Central Bank already requested in
September at least for the euro area.
This step would require a potentially tricky change of EU treaties,
and member states allergic to new fiscal transfers, including Germany
and the Netherlands, have insisted on the temporary nature of the
recovery fund. This will be one of the political battles to come, but
only once the pandemic is over and member states prove they are making
good use of the recovery funds.
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