The Herald (Zimbabwe)

EU reaches ‘historic’ deal on pandemic recovery

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European Union leaders clinched an “historic” deal on a massive stimulus plan for their corona virus-throttled economies yesterday, after a fractious summit that lasted almost five days.

THE agreement paves the way for the European Commission, the EU’s executive, to raise billions of euros on capital markets on behalf of all 27 states, an unpreceden­ted act of solidarity in almost seven decades of European integratio­n.

Summit chairman Charles Michel called the accord, reached at a 5: 15 am, “a pivotal moment” for Europe.

Many had warned that a failed summit amid the coronaviru­s pandemic would have put the bloc’s viability in serious doubt after years of economic crisis and Britain’s recent departure.

News of the deal in Brussels saw the euro rise to a fresh four- month high of US$ 1,1470.

“This agreement sends a concrete signal that Europe is a force for action,” a jubilant Michel told a news conference.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who spearheade­d a push for the deal with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, hailed it as “truly historic”.

Leaders hope t he € 750 billion ( US$ 857,33 billion) recovery fund and its related € 1,1 trillion 2021- 2017 budget will help repair the continent’s deepest recession since World War Two after the coronaviru­s outbreak shut down economies.

But in an unwieldy club of 27, each with a veto power, the summit also exposed

faultlines across the bloc that are likely to hinder future decision- making on money as richer northern countries resisted helping out the poorer south.

The Netherland­s led a group of ‘frugal’ states with Austria, Sweden, Denmark and Finland, insisted that aid to Italy, Spain and other Mediterran­ean countries that took the brunt of the pandemic should be mainly in loans, not in non- repayable grants.

“There were a few clashes, but that’s all part of the game,” said Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, describing a “warm” relationsh­ip with his Italian counterpar­t Giuseppe Conte.

But Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said the frugals’ negotiatin­g power was here to stay, suggesting Europe’s traditiona­l Franco- German engine will face challenges from smaller states banding together.

Almost a summit record

Frictions peaked on Sunday night as Macron lost his temper with the ‘frugals’, diplomats said, and Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki branded them “stingy, egotistic states”.

The bickering spun the summit out, making it the EU’s second- ever longest, just 20 minutes short of a record set in 2000 in Nice, according to Rutte. “We would have broken the record at 6: 05am, but we ended at 5: 45am,” he said.

Under the compromise, the Commission will borrow € 750 billion using its triple- A debt rating, disbursing € 390 billion in grants — less than the originally targeted € 500 billion — and € 360 billion in cheap loans.

Given the difficulti­es, talk of Europe’s ‘Hamilton’ moment — hailed as such by German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz on Monday in reference to Alexander

Hamilton’s decision to federalise debts of US states in 1790 — is overblown.

The summit deal does not set the EU on the path towards a US- style fiscal union, although some see it as a first step.

Rutte’s negotiatio­ns won an “emergency brake” to temporaril­y stop transfers of money from the recovery fund if an EU state was seen as not meeting reform conditions tied to the money.

The ‘frugals’ also secured larger rebates from the next multi- year EU budget, a payback mechanism first won by Britain in the 1980s and which France had hoped to phase out after Brexit.

The recovery plan now faces a potentiall­y difficult passage through the European Parliament and it must be ratified by all member states, which will mean a delay getting the funds to economies that desperatel­y need the help now. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters. ?? European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen do an elbow bump at the end of a news conference following a four -day European summit at the European Council in Brussels, Belgium
— Reuters. European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen do an elbow bump at the end of a news conference following a four -day European summit at the European Council in Brussels, Belgium

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