The Next Generation EU (NGEU) programme represents a crucial first step towards fiscal mutuality against common shocks in the EU, changing the way the Union finances itself. 
      
    
    
      This is why the LSE  European
 Institute recently hosted a panel event aimed at bringing together 
experts to explore the design and implementation of the NGEU programme, 
weighing the positives against the negatives. In this article, Renato Giacon and Corrado Macchiarelli draw together some insights from the panel discussion.
The Next Generation EU programme is changing the way the EU finances 
itself. Never before has the European Commission borrowed at such a 
large scale on financial markets. Meanwhile, six EU member states 
(Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Romania, and Slovenia) have decided to
 make the leap of faith and have included a formal request for 
concessional loans in their adopted Recovery and Resilience Plans with 
the aim of overcoming not only their large funding needs post Covid-19 
but also a decade of low investment expenditure.
These developments raise a number of key questions, notably how the 
Next Generation EU programme and the EU’s recovery fund (the Recovery 
and Resilience Facility – RRF) should be designed and implemented to 
better focus on effective, efficient, equitable and sustainable ways of 
spending EU and national money for bankable projects; successfully 
mobilise private sector funding from institutional investors, 
international financial institutions, and commercial banks; and deliver 
the promised medium to long-term benefits in terms of economic 
convergence, complexity and higher growth patterns that EU countries can
 derive from it.
The national Recovery and Resilience Plans – that each EU member 
state is asked to compile and stick to – are embedded in the European 
Semester, the EU’s framework for economic policy coordination, with 
grants and loan payments to EU member states released only upon the 
successful implementation of performance-based milestones. These are 
defined both in terms of investments and reforms, with the additional 
request to achieve ambitious green and digital targets. Such enhanced 
policy steering at the EU level must balance different national agendas 
driven by often competing political economy needs. The mechanism 
represents strong external market discipline both in the funding and the
 investment framework, which finds a precedent only in the experience of
 some EU countries such as Greece under the Enhanced Surveillance 
Framework post-2010.
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
Some light was shed on these topics at a recent LSE  event
 by Ines Rocha of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development 
(EBRD). Drawing on operational insights provided by the active role of 
the EBRD  in the implementation of the NGEU programme and the deployment 
of the Recovery Funds, she made the point that large grants-funded 
projects under the Recovery and Resilience Facility are usually included
 ex-ante in countries’ Recovery and Resilience Plans, while 
smaller projects that are part of broader investment programmes might be
 selected through public tenders or similar procedures. Private sector 
projects to be financed via Recovery and Resilience Facility loans 
mainly depend on the international financial institutions, national 
promotional banks and commercial banks’ pipelines, creating an important
 private sector-led investment stream in the implementation of the 
programme.
Furthermore, EU countries – which have requested EBRD  engagement in 
the delivery of their Recovery and Resilience Plans – have recognised 
that the EBRD  is strategically aligned in its own priorities and country
 strategies with the national Recovery Plans. The EBRD  can assist the 
countries in delivering policy objectives and leverage the EU recovery 
grants and loans by attracting other private co-financiers to facilitate
 successful programme delivery.
The most typical sectors of EBRD  intervention include the areas of: green growth
 (such as financing renewable energy, electricity storage projects, 
hydrogen production, green cities, clean mobility, and improving the 
energy efficiency of buildings); accelerating the digital transformation
 (5G, gigabit networks and fibre optic networks, broadband projects, 
digital upskilling and reskilling programmes, support for the 
digitalisation of businesses with a particular focus on SMEs, start-ups 
and greater cloud usage); and financing research and development,
 as well as innovation projects outside the digital sector such as in 
the field of climate innovation (i.e. fertilisers and cement sectors).
The most concrete EBRD  engagement under the recovery funds so far has
 been in Greece through the Corporate Loan Facility. The programme will 
combine up to €500 million of Recovery and Resilience Facility 
concessional loans managed by the EBRD, up to €500 million of EBRD  
commercial own-resources financing, and financing from private investors
 and commercial banks. The EBRD  signed an Operational Agreement with the
 Greek Ministry of Finance in November 2021. From the point of view of 
project structuring, the Greek Recovery and Resilience Facility is 
unique insofar as it promotes financial discipline by private sector 
final beneficiaries which have to pay back the loans, encourages proper 
risk assessment by market players in the absence of Greek state 
guarantees, and leverages Recovery and Resilience Facility funds through
 co-financing with private sector funding sources.
Gaps and opportunities
At the same event, LSE’s Anthony Bartzokas singled out the NGEU 
programme as a new important tool to support investment recovery in the 
EU, funded through the Commission’s borrowing on the capital markets. 
Furthermore, there are early positive signals from markets with 
NGEU-related announcements already demonstrating a significant 
spread-compressing effect on euro area sovereign borrowing costs. 
LSE
      
      
      
      
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