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EU Approves $2.2 Trillion Stimulus Plan Backed by Joint Debt

A deal was agreed with Hungary and Poland, which had angrily protested a mechanism tying funding to upholding democratic norms.

EU Approves $2.2 Trillion Stimulus Plan Backed by Joint Debt
(Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)  

European Union leaders meeting in Brussels resolved a standoff with two eastern member states that had threatened to delay a historic $2.2 trillion budget and stimulus package just as the latest wave of coronavirus infections ravages the continent’s economies.

A deal was agreed on Thursday with Hungary and Poland, which had angrily protested a mechanism tying funding to upholding democratic norms. The agreement paves the way for the EU to put into effect not just its seven-year budget but a 750 billion-euro ($909 billion) pandemic relief package that will be financed by joint debt.

The leaders also agreed to more aggressive cuts in greenhouse gas emissions over the next decade, paving the way for Europe to become the world’s first climate-neutral continent. The bloc will cut pollution by at least 55% by 2030, up from 40% previously.

“The agreement will help us provide a strong economic response to the crisis while preserving the rule of law,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told reporters Friday morning after the all-night meeting, adding that the stimulus is a key component to the EU’s climate ambitions. “Today’s agreement puts us on a clear path toward climate neutrality in 2050.”

The German-brokered compromise on the budget offers reassurances over how the new conditions will be applied, but the rule-of-law provision will remain in place. The dispute was the culmination of years of clashes between Brussels and the two countries over everything from political meddling in the judiciary to LGBTQ rights.

Under the compromise, the conditionality will only kick in from Jan. 1 and relate to commitments under the new budget. Penalties, meanwhile, will only be enacted after the European Court of Justice has had its say, which could take months.

In truth, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Polish counterpart Mateusz Morawiecki had backed themselves into a corner by repeatedly decrying the linkage between EU financing and democratic standards. That mechanism, agreed on in the summer between the European Parliament and Germany -- which holds the bloc’s rotating presidency -- was supported by the rest of the EU, in particular states like the Netherlands that want more scrutiny over how cash is spent.

Morawiecki said he had no choice but to drop the veto, as in such a scenario “we could have ended up with a rule-of-law mechanism but without the money.”

EU Approves $2.2 Trillion Stimulus Plan Backed by Joint Debt

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte called the rule-of-law provision “historic.” The reaction was mixed in Budapest and Warsaw.

Gergely Gulyas, Hungary’s minister in charge of the premier’s office, said the deal prevents the budget being used for “political attacks” and includes all guarantees that Hungary and Poland requested. But the junior coalition party of Poland’s hardline justice minister, Zbigniew Ziobro, questioned whether the agreement will allow his country to remain “sovereign.”

Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven said that the declaration that allowed for the agreement didn’t change the original rule-of-law mechanism that had been agreed by member states.

“There’s no compromise on the content, no compromise on the text,” Lofven told reporters in Brussels before the start of the summit. “We declared things we needed to declare.”

There was a lot at stake for Hungary and Poland. The pair are the biggest net beneficiaries of EU cash, helping their economies close the gap on their richer neighbors to the west, and are in line for at least 180 billion euros from this spending package.

Had they gone ahead with their vetoes, the EU would have switched to an emergency budget from 2021. That would have seen funding plunge in almost all areas and potentially put Poland and Hungary at the back of the line for even the limited development aid that would be available.

Investors cheered the deal, with the zloty and the forint among top performers against the euro on Thursday, marking a third day of gains.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.