Britain frozen out as EU finance chiefs plot future
European Union finance ministers meet without Britain in Brussels to try to iron out their differences on plans to reform the euro in the wake of the shock Brexit vote. They will prepare for a leaders’ summit on December 15 to discuss proposals by French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker. The 27 EU ministers will discuss three key issues that go to the heart of making the euro more politically and economically unified, so it is more resilient against future crises.
These are creating a unified euro zone budget that could be used to respond to a crisis; simplifying the EU’s budgetary discipline rules; and finally completing a “banking union” that removes restrictions between lenders across the bloc.
“We will listen to the ministers” but “they will not decide anything”, a senior EU official said, adding that they would merely “touch base” on the main issues.
The meeting will include the Eurogroup of 19 countries that use the single currency plus seven others that signed the 2012 European fiscal pact during the euro zone debt crisis.
The Czech Republic, which has not signed the treaty, and Croatia, which was not an EU member when the treaty was signed, will also both be invited as observers in a bid to build unity behind plans for a key part of the European dream.
But Britain will be left out in the cold, as it did not sign the pact, and is also set to leave the EU in 2019 before most of the planned reforms will take effect.
One of the most complex subjects will be simplifying rules for EU and particularly euro zone budgets, which governments have to keep under tight control to escape sanctions from Brussels.
“The documents on this subject take weeks to read,” one official said.
But if the Europeans agree on the need for reform, they are divided on how to achieve it with France traditionally taking a more easy-going line than austerity-loving Germany.
The question of the euro zone getting its own budget, an old idea recently dusted off again by Macron as part of his grand vision for post-Brexit Europe, is also complicated.
Paris wants a big budget as a show of European solidarity in the face of financial shocks, whereas Juncker wants to make it smallerscale — a line favoured by the Germans.
Banking union and a system of deposit guarantees to prevent bank runs will also be on the agenda, with the EU keen to finally finish plans that have been on the drawing board since the euro zone debt crisis started.