Hungary
Brussels threatens to hit Hungary’s economy if
Viktor Orbán vetoes Ukraine aid
EU strategy aims to spook investors by cutting off
funding to Budapest in stand-off over €50bn package
https://www.ft.com/content/9dabcd4b-9c64-4124-9f9c-b0c898c84c8f
Henry Foy
and Andy Bounds in Brussels and Marton Dunai in Budapest YESTERDAY
The EU will
sabotage Hungary’s economy if Budapest blocks fresh aid to Ukraine at a summit
this week, under a confidential plan drawn up by Brussels that marks a
significant escalation in the battle between the EU and its most pro-Russian
member state.
In a
document drawn up by EU officials and seen by the Financial Times, Brussels has
outlined a strategy to explicitly target Hungary’s economic weaknesses, imperil
its currency and drive a collapse in investor confidence in a bid to hurt “jobs
and growth” if Budapest refuses to lift its veto against the aid to Kyiv.
Viktor
Orbán, Hungary’s premier, has vowed to block the use of the EU budget to
provide €50bn in financial aid to Ukraine at an emergency summit of leaders on
Thursday.
If he does
not back down, other EU leaders should publicly vow to permanently shut off all
EU funding to Budapest with the intention of spooking the markets,
precipitating a run on the country’s forint currency and a surge in the cost of
its borrowing, Brussels stated in the document.
“This is
Europe telling Viktor Orbán ‘enough is enough; it’s time to get in line. You
may have a pistol, but we have the bazooka’,” said Mujtaba Rahman, Europe
director at Eurasia Group, a consultancy.
The
document declares that “in the case of no agreement in the February 1 [summit],
other heads of state and government would publicly declare that in the light of
the unconstructive behaviour of the Hungarian PM . . . they cannot imagine that” EU funds would be provided to Budapest.
Without
that funding, “financial markets and European and international companies might
be less interested to invest in Hungary”, the document stated. Such punishment
“could quickly trigger a further increase of the cost of funding of the public
deficit and a drop in the currency”.
János Bóka,
Hungary’s EU minister, told the FT that Budapest was not aware of the financial
threat, but that his country “does not give in to pressure”.
“Hungary
does not establish a connection between support for Ukraine and access to EU
funds, and rejects other parties doing so,” he said. “Hungary has and will
continue to participate constructively in the negotiations.”
But in a
sign of the rising pressure on Budapest to strike a compromise, Bóka said
Budapest sent a new proposal to Brussels on Saturday, specifying it was now
open to using the EU budget for the Ukraine package and even issuing common
debt to finance it, if other caveats were added that gave Budapest the
opportunity to change its mind at a later date.
The
document, produced by an official in the Council of the EU, the Brussels body
that represents member states, lays out Hungary’s economic vulnerabilities —
including its “very high public deficit”, “very high inflation”, weak currency
and the EU’s highest level of debt servicing payments as a proportion of gross
domestic product.
It lays
outs how “jobs and growth . . . depend to a large extent” on overseas
finance that is predicated on high levels of EU funding.
A
spokesperson for the Council of the EU said they did not comment on leaks.
Brussels
has wielded its financial leverage against member states before, such as with
Poland and Hungary over rule of law concerns and Greece during the eurozone
crisis, but a strategy to explicitly seek to undermine a member state’s economy
would mark a major new step for the bloc.
Three EU
diplomats told the FT that many countries backed the plan. “The mood has got
harsher,” said one. “What kind of union do we have if we allow this kind of
behaviour?”
Another
said: “The stakes are high. It is blackmail.”
Bóka told
the FT that Budapest wanted “to explore the possibility of a more constructive
and European solution” and has proposed it could support the €50bn plan if it
was given an annual veto on the payments. Other EU countries have already
refused this suggestion as they fear Orbán would seek to block it every year
and extract further concessions.
But one of
the diplomats added there was “no way” Orbán would get a veto over
funding.
Bóka said
“the political pressure on Hungary is continuous and strong” but that it did
not influence his government’s negotiations.
“We had to
take a step, and we trust that the other party will be similarly flexible,” he
added.
Recommended
InterviewViktor
Orbán
US attacks
Hungary’s Orbán for ‘fantasy foreign policy’ that helps Putin
While 26
member states have a plan B to send money to Kyiv outside the EU budget, that
would require national parliaments’ ratification, causing delays and
uncertainty.
Several
capitals have considered whether it is feasible to use Article 7 of the Treaty
on the European Union, which would allow Brussels to strip Budapest of its
voting rights or, one diplomat said, block disbursement of money. But others
have rebuffed the notion given that it requires unanimous support and many
countries are reluctant to deploy such a serious sanction.
Bóka said
it was important that EU unity was “preserved”, adding: “That is why we are
willing to make compromises so long as they do not affect our vital interests.”
He added,
however, that if the compromise effort failed, Hungary’s original proposal of a
separate Ukraine fund outside the EU budget would be Budapest’s preference.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário