Berlin buckles on bonds in €500B Franco-German
recovery plan
New fund would borrow from financial markets to give
grants to countries hit hard by coronavirus.
By MATTHEW
KARNITSCHNIG AND RYM MOMTAZ 5/18/20, 8:47 PM CET Updated 5/18/20, 9:21 PM CET
Berlin has dropped its longstanding resistance to
common European bonds
BERLIN —
Coronavirus has claimed a new victim: German frugality.
Berlin
dropped its longstanding resistance to common European bonds, as Chancellor
Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron agreed to a blueprint for a
€500 billion recovery fund to help the countries hardest hit by the pandemic
get back on their feet.
Under the
plan, the recovery fund would be fully financed by debt issued by the EU and
backed by all 27 members. The money would be distributed by the European
Commission in the form of grants as part of the bloc’s normal budget and repaid
over the long term by the EU.
While the
proposal was welcomed by the European Commission, it would require the approval
of all EU member countries — which promises to be a torturous process — to be
realized. Countries such as Austria, the Netherlands and Finland, which share
German traditions of parsimony, are likely to oppose the plan, or at least try
to.
Austrian Chancellor
Sebastian Kurz wasted no time in making clear that the hard-line frugal faction
had not changed its opposition to grants for coronavirus-hit countries.
"The
crisis that we are experiencing is unprecedented and it requires a response
which is efficient, collective and above all European." — Emmanuel Macron
"We
are ready to help most affected countries with loans," Kurz tweeted after
consulting with his counterparts from Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden.
Even so,
the Franco-German accord marks a major breakthrough.
“Extraordinary circumstances call for extraordinary
measures," Merkel said at a press conference following a video call with
Macron during which they sealed their agreement.
Macron
struck a similar note.
"The
crisis that we are experiencing is unprecedented and it requires a response
which is efficient, collective and above all European," he said. "The
virus does not know any borders and has affected all of Europe."
Berlin has
resisted calls for so-called eurobonds for years, amid worries that common debt
instruments would leave Germany holding the bag for other countries' spending.
While those
sensitivities haven’t dissipated (both Merkel and Macron avoided the term
“eurobond” on Monday), the depth of the political and economic crises triggered
by coronavirus appears to have convinced Merkel that Germany had no other
choice if it wants to avoid further fissures in the EU.
Political
leaders across southern Europe have been demanding more solidarity from Germany
and other northern countries for weeks, warning that their populations, which
have been walloped by coronavirus, would turn against the EU if more help isn't
forthcoming.
“Germany and France are standing up for Europe,”
Merkel said.
Economists
who have been pushing Germany to pursue bolder action cheered the plan, in part
because it doesn’t rely on leverage or some other financial sleight of hand to
inflate the amount of money available to recipients.
“It’s a
pretty good proposal,” said Lucas Guttenberg, a former European Central Bank
economist who is now the deputy director of the Jacques Delors Centre, a
Berlin-based think tank. “It’s very unambiguous. It’s not financial wizardry,
it’s straightforward — European bonds for EU expenditure.”
Although
the plan is a Franco-German initiative, an Elysée official said Berlin and
Paris had kept the Commission and various member countries informed | Sandra
Steins/Bundesregierung via Getty Images
The European Commission, which is due to present its
recovery blueprint next week, hailed the Franco-German plan.
"It
acknowledges the scope and the size of the economic challenge that Europe
faces, and rightly puts the emphasis on the need to work on a solution with the
European budget at its core," Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
said. "This goes in the direction of the proposal the Commission is
working on which will also take into account the views of all Member States and
the European Parliament.”
Though the
size of the proposed recovery fund is smaller than some had hoped, the fact
that the money will be distributed as grants to the countries most in need, and
not as loans, marks a major concession on Merkel’s part and suggests that the
German leader has learned from past crises.
Europe’s
rescue efforts for Greece and other countries hit by the eurozone debt crisis
were widely perceived as too punitive, mainly due to the austerity demanded by
Germany as a condition for the aid. That experience rattled confidence in the
EU in much of Southern Europe and fueled anti-German sentiment in many
quarters.
Both Merkel
and Macron stressed that the proposal could be put into motion under the EU’s
existing treaty framework and that national parliaments would have the final
say.
The nature
of the pandemic, which unlike the debt crisis was not caused by government
mismanagement, likely made it easier for Merkel to agree to relax the
conditions for the money. That said, she still needs to sell the idea to her
own parliament.
Although
the plan is a Franco-German initiative, an Elysée official said Berlin and
Paris had kept the Commission and various member countries informed as they
hashed out the agreement.
"They
were aware it was coming, they didn’t discover it in front of their TV, [Dutch
Prime Minister] Mark Rutte had many conversations with the chancellor, with the
president, they will speak again in coming days," the official said.
Both Merkel
and Macron stressed that the proposal could be put into motion under the EU’s
existing treaty framework and that national parliaments would have the final
say.
“It’s a
very transparent process,” Merkel said.
The two
leaders said that countries and sectors with the greatest need would be given
priority, while adding that it would be up to the Commission to work out the
details.
Germany’s
opposition Greens, who have been pressing for debt mutualization for years,
welcomed the plan but said the EU must act at its next summit. “Now we need
quick approval for an ambitious EU budget to ensure that these urgently needed
funds can be distributed,” said Franziska Brantner, a Green MP who is her
party’s spokeswoman on EU affairs.
Merkel
described the Franco-German proposal as a “short answer” to the crisis, but
added that “longer answers” would also have to be discussed in the coming weeks
and months. In other words: more fundamental steps toward European integration
that would require treaty change.
Europe’s
divisions have put such sweeping reform plans out of reach in recent years and
it’s far from certain that the coronavirus crisis will change that dynamic.
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