The Korea Herald

EU must act quickly to catch up to US, warns report

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BRUSSELS, Belgium (AFP) — The EU risks lagging further behind the United States unless Brussels makes significan­t changes to the single market to give it “teeth,” warned the author of a report that is planned to be submitted to leaders Thursday.

Enrico Letta, a former Italian prime minister, has crisscross­ed Europe and spent months preparing a report for EU leaders on what the 27-nation bloc needs to do to keep pace with other global economies including China.

European businesses have been hit hard by the fallout from Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine which sent energy prices soaring while facing a double threat from bonanzas of state subsidies and reduced regulation in China and the United States.

“There is a sense of urgency because the gap with the US is growing. We need to intervene fast, there is no time to waste,” Letta told reporters.

Growth figures for the EU and US economy illustrate the difference. The bloc grew by a mere 0.5 percent in 2023, compared with 2.5 percent in the United States.

Brussels is especially fearful of being left behind in the technologi­es needed for the future, including solar panels, batteries, semiconduc­tors and artificial intelligen­ce.

The EU’s executive arm says an extra 620 billion euros ($660 billion) each year will be needed to finance the clean energy and digital transition­s.

According to Letta, Europe will need to mobilize private funds but European startups find it difficult to access larger sums — often forcing them across the Atlantic.

Creating a true single market for financial services “is the core of the solution of how to finance the transition,” he said.

Letta wants a savings

and investment union, pointing to how more than 300 billion euros in European savings leave every year to be invested in the American market.

For Letta, the single market that allows the free movement of goods, services, capital and people within the EU is too small.

It should be bigger and include energy, telecoms and finance as well as defense, he argues. Currently, these markets are fragmented with different national rules that make it difficult to scale up.

“We need a single market with teeth,” he said.

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