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Insight EU Finance Monitoring. Photo by geralt on Pixabay

Brussels, 9 February 2024

  • The new provisions will promote investments, factor in social convergence, and increase national ownership of plans
  • The updated rules set minimum amounts of average deficit and debt reduction a government must observe.
  • The period within which the objectives of a national plan should be achieved can be extended, and deviations from the plan would be allowed in exceptional circumstances
  • First national plans outlining expenditure, reforms and investments to be prepared by September 2024

EU co-legislators on Saturday provisionally agreed a revamp of EU economic governance making it clearer, investment friendly, more tailored to each country’s situation, and more flexible.

The new rules, politically agreed by European Parliament and member state negotiators add clarity and simplicity to the process of fiscal surveillance by focussing on one single parameter, a government’s yearly expenditure, to analyse the sustainability of public finances. All countries will provide medium-term plans outlining their expenditure targets and how investments and reforms will be undertaken. Member states with high deficit or debt levels will receive pre-plan guidance on what their expenditure targets should look like. To ensure sustainable expenditure, numerical benchmark safeguards have been introduced, to be followed by countries with excessive debt or deficit. The rules will also add a new focus to the system which will now also actively contribute to fostering public investment in priority areas. Finally, the system will be more tailored to each country’s realities rather than applying a one-size-fits-all approach, and will better factor in social concerns.

Quotes of the co-rapporteurs

Esther De Lange (EPP,NL) said, “ A new economic governance framework was much needed. We have taken our responsibility by ensuring that the new fiscal rules are sound and credible, while also allowing room for necessary investments.”

Margarida Marques (S&D, PT) said, “The new rules will provide more room for investment, flexibility for member states to smooth their adjustments, and will strengthen the social dimension. With a case-by-case and medium-term approach, coupled with increased ownership, member states will be better equipped to prevent austerity policies.”

Investments

The rules will specifically oblige member states to ensure that their national plans explain how investments will be made in the EU priority areas of the climate and digital transitions, energy security, and defence.

Already undertaken investments in these areas must be taken into account by the Commission when drawing up its report about a member state’s deviations from its expenditure path, thereby giving more room for that member state to argue its case for not being placed under an excessive deficit procedure.

Additionally, national expenditure on the co-financing of EU funded programmes will be excluded from a government’s expenditure, creating more incentives to invest.

The plans will also need to provide information on public investment needs, i.e. where investment gaps exist.

Ensuring credibility of the rules – the deficit and debt reduction safeguards

Countries with excessive debt would be subject to safeguard rules requiring them, amongst others, to reduce their debt on average by 1% per year if their debt is above 90% of GDP, and by 0.5% per year on average if their debt is between 60% and 90% of GDP. These provisions are less restrictive than the current requirement that every country should cut debt annually by 1/20 of the excess above 60%.

If a country’s deficit is above 3% of GDP, the requirement would be to reduce this during periods of growth to reach a level of 1.5% of GDP, in order to build a spending buffer for difficult economic conditions. Further numerical benchmarks on by how much the deficit should reduce per year would also apply.

A country with excess debt would not be obliged to reduce this to under 60% by the end of the period of years the plan runs for. Rather, by the end of the agreed period, the country should have debt that is considered to be “on a plausible downward trajectory”.

Breathing space

The new rules contain various provisions to allow more breathing space. Notably, they give three extra years over the standard four for achieving the objectives of the national plan. This additional time would, ordinarily, only be granted if the investment and reform commitments underpinning an extension fulfil a defined set of criteria.

Upon a member state’s request, Council can grant permission to deviate from the country’s expenditure path where exceptional circumstances outside its control lead to a major impact on its public finances. A time-limit for such a deviation would be specified but this period can be extended if the exceptional circumstances persist. An extension would be of a maximum of one year and may be granted more than once.

Improving dialogue and ownership

Prior to the submission of a national plan, which all member states must submit, the member state concerned shall meet with the Commission, with the objective of defining a plan that satisfies all requirements. For countries with excessive deficit or debt, up to a month before the Commission transmits its guidance on the expenditure path to a member state, these member states may request a discussion process with the Commission. Both types of meetings provide an opportunity for the member states concerned to state their case. This should ensure a more tailored approach and ownership.

A member state may request the submission of a revised national plan if there are objective circumstances preventing its implementation, including if there is a change in government.

Numerous other provisions were also inserted improving dialogue between the EU institutions and between the member states and the EU institutions, with the aim of allowing more public explanation of decisions taken and justification of the different points of view.

The role of the national independent fiscal institutions, the non-partisan bodies tasked with vetting the suitability of their government’s budgets and fiscal projections, is also considerably strengthened, the aim being that this greater role will help build national ownership further.

Better integrating social concerns

The social dimension is strengthened within the European Semester process. Both the implementation of the principles of the European Pillar of Social Rights as well as risks to social convergence will be measured by the Commission. Member states will need to ensure that their national plan also contributes to social objectives.

Moreover, cyclical elements of unemployment benefit expenditure will not be considered when calculating a government’s expenditure.

Application

The rules will enter into force very soon after their publication in the EU’s Official Journal. The first national plans will need to be submitted by each member state by 20 September 2024.


Economic governance review: Council and Parliament strike deal on reform of fiscal rules

The Council and European Parliament negotiators today reached a provisional political agreement on the proposed reform of the EU’s economic governance framework.

The main objective of the reform is to ensure sound and sustainable public finances, while promoting sustainable and inclusive growth in all member states through reforms and investment.

The new rules will significantly improve the existing framework and ensure effective and applicable rules for all EU countries. They will safeguard balanced and sustainable public finances, strengthen the focus on structural reforms, and foster investments, growth and job creation throughout the EU. I’m glad that we have found a balanced agreement that will now allow for a swift implementation.

Vincent Van Peteghem, Belgian Minister of Finance

Main elements of the provisional agreement

The Council and Parliament agreed to maintain the reform’s overall objective of reducing debt ratios and deficits in a gradual, realistic, sustained and growth-friendly manner while protecting reforms and investment in strategic areas such as digital, green, social or defence. At the same time, the new framework will provide appropriate room for counter-cyclical policies and address macroeconomic imbalances.

The agreement also maintains the obligation for member states to submit national medium-term fiscal structural plans.

The Commission will submit a ‘reference trajectory’ (previously called ‘technical trajectory‘) to member states where government debt exceeds the 60% of gross domestic product (GDP) or where the government deficit exceeds the 3% of GDP. The provisional agreement provides for an optional and factual pre-dialogue between the member states and the Commission beforehand.

The reference trajectory indicates how member states can ensure that by the end of a fiscal adjustment period of four years, government debt is on a plausibly downward trajectory or stays at prudent levels over the medium-term.

The provisional agreement contains two safeguards that the reference trajectory must comply with, the debt sustainability safeguard, to ensure a decrease in debt levels and the deficit resilience safeguard, to provide a safety margin below the Treaty deficit reference value of 3% of GDP, in order to create fiscal buffers.

Based on the reference trajectory, member states then incorporate the fiscal adjustment path, expressed as net expenditure paths into their national medium-term fiscal structural plans. The plans, including the net expenditure paths, consequently need to be endorsed by the Council. The agreement provides that a control account will record deviations from the country-specific net expenditure paths.

The new rules will further encourage structural reforms and public investments for sustainability and growth. Member states will be allowed to ask for an extension of the four-year fiscal adjustment period to maximum seven years, if they carry out certain reforms and investments that improve resilience and growth potential and support fiscal sustainability and address common priorities of the EU. These include achieving a fair, green and digital transition, ensuring energy security, strengthening social and economic resilience and, where necessary, the build-up of defence capabilities.

Next steps

The provisional political agreement on the preventive arm of the economic governance framework is subject to approval by the Council in the committee of permanent representatives and by the Parliament economic affairs committee before going through a formal vote in both the Council and the Parliament. Once adopted, the text will be published in the EU’s official Journal and enter into force the following day.

The regulation on the corrective arm and the directive on requirements for budgetary frameworks of member states only require the European Parliament to be consulted.

The aim is to adopt them in the Council at the same time as the preventive arm.

Background

Economic governance is a key pillar of the architecture of the Economic and Monetary Union, since 1992, aiming to prevent and correct macroeconomic imbalances that could weaken national economies and affect other EU countries through cross-border spill overs.

The EU economy is facing renewed challenges with the recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and the consequences of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine. Against the backdrop of higher debt levels, interest rates and new common investment and reform goals, the EU is reforming the stability and growth pact and how the pact’s effectiveness could be further improved.

On 26 April 2023, the Commission presented a package of three legislative proposals: two regulations aiming to replace (preventive arm) or amend (corrective arm) the two pillars of the stability and growth pact first adopted in 1997, and an amended directive on requirements for budgetary frameworks of member states.

On 21 December 2023, the Council formally approved a mandate for negotiations with the European Parliament on the preventive arm regulation and an agreement in principle with a view to consulting the European Parliament on the corrective arm regulation and the directive on requirements for national budgetary frameworks.

The European Council has provided political impetus on the reform, most recently at its meeting on 26-27 October 2023.

The Council negotiator was Vincent Van Peteghem, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of Belgium. The European Parliament negotiators were co-rapporteurs Esther de Lange and Margarida Marques. The Commission was represented by Executive Vice-President Valdis Dombrovskis.

 

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