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30 October 2019

POLITICO: Commission gives up on EU budget deal in 2019


Budget Commissioner Günther Oettinger acknowledged that leaders will not reach a deal on the 2021-2027 EU budget this year.

“I think there’s going to be progress up to December, but no agreement in December,” the commissioner told reporters.

“If President [Donald] Tusk is unable to reach a conclusion, then it’s going to be impossible for the new president to do this in the first few weeks when he is in office,” Oettinger added. Belgium’s Charles Michel takes over as president of the European Council on December 1.

However, in a combative press conference, Oettinger challenged the narrative that EU budget costs for countries will rise significantly after 2020. EU countries remain hugely split on the budget proposal and Germany in particular has been vocal as part of a “frugal five” grouping concerned about limiting spending in Brussels.

Oettinger said suggestions that Germany’s budget bill would double to €33 billion are “completely wrong” and are “lies” not in line with the numbers discussed by the Commission with Berlin. Over the weekend, the Financial Times reported German government estimates that “show Germany would be hit with a sharp rise in its net EU budget contributions, from €15bn in 2020 to upwards of €33bn in 2027. ”

Those figures did not specify how the numbers were calculated or whether inflation had been taken into account. According to Oettinger, Germany’s net contribution to Brussels is expected to be €18.1 billion in 2018 prices for 2021 and €23.5 billion in 2018 prices for 2027. [...]

Full article on POLITICO



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