EPC: Why the German Constitutional Court will (probably) not kill the €750 bn EU recovery fund
07 April 2021
The German Constitutional Court’s postponing of its decision on two claims against the EU recovery fund does not (yet) mean that Next Generation EU will not happen. But there will be a delay and the court’s final decision might remain uncertain for some time.
On 14 December 2020, after arduous negotiations (including a four-day
European Council session in July), and following approval by the
European Parliament, the EU Council unanimously adopted a new Decision
on the EU’s Own Resources (ORD). This Decision contains, in particular,
the necessary provisions for the financing of the temporary EU Recovery
Fund (€750 bn: €390 bn in grants and €360 bn in loans), also called Next
Generation EU (NGEU).
It marks a milestone in European
integration as, for the first time, it allows the EU to borrow money on
the markets. Most member states will benefit from a better interest rate
than they can get on their own, and will then reimburse their debt over
the next decades. However, the ORD cannot enter into force until it is
approved by all member states, according to their constitutional
requirements (article 311 TFEU). This is in progress, with more than
half of them having already given their approval.
German hurdles
In
Germany, the law approving the ORD was passed by a two-thirds majority
in the Bundestag and unanimously in the Bundesrat, respectively on 25
and 26 March 2021. However, it must be signed by the head of state
before coming into force. On 26 March, the German Constitutional Court
(GCC) issued a press statement saying that the President of the Federal
Republic was not permitted to sign the law for the time being, given
there were two cases challenging the conformity of the law, both with
the EU Treaties and with the German Constitution. The process was thus
put on hold.
The decision taken by the GCC on 26 March is an
interim measure, pending a formal decision which will probably be taken
within the next two or three months. It will most likely follow one of
these three paths:
- The German law approving the EU decision shall immediately enter
into force, because the arguments of the claims are manifestly unfounded
and must be rejected without further ado.
- The GCC will adopt an interim decision, according to which the
German law can be signed, given that the GCC judgment on the conformity
of that law with the German Constitution, and also on the conformity of
the ORD with the EU Treaties, will be taken later, the latter only after
a judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) to
which a preliminary question about that conformity would be requested by
the GCC before deciding (article 267 TFEU). This might take between six
to twelve months.
- The GCC will adopt an interim decision, according to which the
German law cannot be signed now, given that its final judgment on the
claims will be taken later, thus preventing the law from being signed
and the ORD to enter into force during the time it takes for the GCC to
judge these claims on substance (which might be up to one year or more).
A decision to immediately reject the claims would permit the NGEU to
be implemented. Even an interim decision permitting signature would
allow the ORD to enter into force and the recovery fund to be
established, if all member states give their approval. They could
finalise their national plans and implement them when approved by the
EU, without waiting for the judgement of the GCC. However, uncertainty
would persist until that final judgement is made.
In contrast,
an interim decision forbidding the signature of the law would de facto
be fatal for the recovery fund. The fund is needed now, and not in 2022
or later, to allow the member states to try and recover from the acute
economic crisis provoked by the COVID-19 pandemic.
German exceptionalism? Why
do these kinds of legal disputes appear so often in front of the GCC?
It is widely acknowledged that the scope of the principle of primacy of
EU law (see Declaration N°17 attached to the Final Act of the Lisbon
Conference), and thus of the delineation between the powers of the
national constitutional courts and the CJEU, are not interpreted by all
in the same way. However, a kind of unwritten modus vivendi exists. Most
constitutional courts, while claiming not to be completely legally
bound by the case-law of the CJEU, carefully avoid upending the delicate
balance between the national and the EU’s legal orders.
The
German CC has taken a different, and more aggressive, stance. It has not
hesitated to put EU law and the EU’s legal order in jeopardy a number
of times, including in judgements on the Lisbon Treaty ratification
(June 2009), the euro rescue measures (September 2011), the Outright
Monetary Transactions (January 2014 and June 2016) and on the Public
Sector Purchase Program (PSPP) of the European Central Bank (May 2020).
The
most striking elements of these judgements go as far as to deny the
primacy of EU law over national law in certain circumstances,
jeopardising the independence of the European Central Bank (ECB),
denying the exclusive role of the CJEU to interpret EU law, and so on.
They thus risk creating a situation wherein Germany is violating its
explicit international obligations under the EU Treaties (see also
article 23 of the Fundamental Law), and others are encouraged to
question the EU’s legal order.
EU-sceptics to the fore Given
this case-law, it is not surprising that the EU’s opponents (in
Germany) have seized on the opportunity to try to undermine the EU
and/or Germany’s European policy. In the two current cases, the GCC was
called on by members of the extreme right political party AfD
(Alternative für Deutschland) and other Eurosceptics (Bündnis
Bürgerwille).
Their claim is that the ORD is in breach of the EU
Treaties, given that the EU is not permitted to borrow, and that its
member states cannot be mutually liable for each other’s national debt.
They argue that article 311 TFEU on own resources was not respected, and
likened the adoption of the ORD to the USA’s Hamiltonian moment at the
end of the 18th century, when US Secretary of Treasury Hamilton enabled
the federal government to take over the debts of the states and to
reimburse them with federal bonds.
Getting it right? This
line of criticism misses the point. The ORD determines how much the EU
is permitted to spend. For the next multiannual period (2021-2027), it
cannot spend more than 1.4% of the EU’s Gross National Income (GNI).
However, with the €750 bn NGEU, the ORD would add a one-time temporary
increase of 0.6% of EU GNI, which will expire automatically with the
repayments of the borrowed sums. This is not excluded by article 311,
and article 4 of the ORD states that “the funds borrowed on capital
markets cannot be used for the financing of operational expenditure of
the EU”. Being a one-off, time-limited additional fund, it will be
reimbursed: therefore, it is not an own resource (which would not be
repaid). The reimbursements will be made by all member states over a
maximum period of 37 years, a long-term duration that is not out of the
ordinary.
There is no mutualisation of the debts of the member
states: “The borrowed funds which are used to provide loans to Member
States should be repaid using the sums received from the beneficiary
Member States”. Each member state will have its share of the repayments,
and Germany will not be liable for the repayments of others. A
Hamiltonian moment would have happened with the repayment of national
debts by EU federal bonds, which is obviously not foreseen in NGEU.
The
complainants also argue that the EU’s Decision is incompatible with the
Fundamental Law of Germany, as regards the principle of democracy
therein (article 20), considered to be an “eternity clause”, i.e. which
cannot be modified (article 79 paragraph 3). This principle is
interpreted by the GCC in its case-law as including the budgetary powers
of the German Parliament. However, the argument of the complainants is
not plausible in the current case. First, the German Parliament had to
approve the ORD. Second, there is no mutualisation of debt. Third, even
in the worst-case scenario, the burden on the German budget could never
be considered a significant risk, given the amounts at stake, its share
between member states, the duration of the repayments, and comparing
these elements to the German budget.
Losing momentum?
On
the basis of these elements, it is legally arguable that the German
Constitutional Court should immediately confirm the legality of the law
approved by the government and the two chambers of the German
Parliament. However, given its previous case-law, and the traditional
detailed motivation of its judgements, it is more likely to decide to
authorise the signature of the law and its entry into force, while
reserving its judgement on substance for later.
In that case,
the GCC is likely to, at the same time, request a preliminary ruling of
the CJEU on the conformity of the ORD with the EU Treaties and take its
time to examine the conformity of the German law approving the ORD with
the German Constitution. Despite the fact that NGEU would follow its
course, this would raise uncertainty until the final judgment of the
GCC. Moreover, the GCC would, once again, show its reserves toward and
misgivings about any EU or member states’ joint financial instruments,
which might sometimes be needed in an economic and monetary union.
Jean-Claude
Piris is a consultant on EU law and politics and international public
law, and former director-general of the EU Council Legal Service.EPC
© European Policy Centre EPC