The EU’s budget is setting it up for geopolitical marginalisation - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 马里奥•德拉吉

The EU’s budget is setting it up for geopolitical marginalisation

The good, the bad and the ugly of the bloc’s multiyear spending proposal
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":8.1,"text":"Earlier in July, the European Commission fired the starting gun on a 30-month marathon negotiation on the EU’s next seven-year budget. Brussels has proposed a nearly €2tn common spending pot it claims faces up to Europe’s “new and emerging challenges”. Does it?"}],[{"start":27.299999999999997,"text":"First, the good. Brussels has taken some steps towards reallocating funds to today’s priorities: infrastructure, defence, security, research and energy and industrial resilience. The exact numbers are already the subject of fights, even inside the commission itself. But just as important is the lack of controversy around the methodological changes to the budget."}],[{"start":52.3,"text":"The commission rolls agricultural subsidies and transfers to poorer regions into new national plans, to be proposed by governments, approved by the EU and checked against delivery to release funding. This marks a major shift, modelled on the post-pandemic recovery fund. Grumbles can be heard about insufficient funding and a power grab by national governments from local officials. But not about the basic principle of cash in return for demonstrable, mutually agreed reforms."}],[{"start":86.44,"text":"That is a quiet revolution from the habit of simply sending checks to farmers and local governments; the most remarkable thing about the budget draft was the least remarked upon. Another change seemingly received without objection is the streamlining of the budget into fewer funding streams. This simplification should speed up disbursement and ease planning and co-ordination."}],[{"start":111.78,"text":"Next, the bad. The commission has reprioritised its budget with a view to the changing geopolitical landscape. The commission’s new spending priorities show it has listened to warnings in the Enrico Letta and Mario Draghi reports. But is has missed the opportunity to integrate budget politics more closely with strategic calls to unify the single market and boost productivity. A case in point is the ill-judged idea of lump-sum taxes on EU companies with large turnover. Brussels is right to seek new revenue sources. But any business levy should be designed within its planned pan-EU corporate code. Getting a share of the corporate tax base from companies choosing this regime is better than slapping a new tax on top of existing ones."}],[{"start":164.36,"text":"The budget also fails to address the need for more equity funding for companies in key strategic sectors, set out convincingly in a report by the European Policy Centre that proposes an off-budget instrument resembling an EU sovereign wealth fund making equity investments in the bloc. This is a good idea. So is the EPC’s call to securitise EU-funded common European industrial and infrastructure projects. Both would boost the growth of badly needed pan-EU capital markets."}],[{"start":198.29000000000002,"text":"A third weakness is the commission’s lack of attention to providing investors with pan-EU safe benchmark securities. The budget draft does nothing to promote this. More common debt is a politically explosive idea. But it need not be raised for subsidising poorer members; a stronger justification is to fund an EU sovereign wealth fund."}],[{"start":222.74,"text":"Finally, the ugly. Brussels commits the statistical sin of using nominal numbers, which mainly reflect inflation, to claim a large increase in the budget. The relevant measure of resources is the share of gross national income the budget allocates to common priorities. The last budget came to a little over 1 per cent of EU GNI. Adding in the special post-pandemic debt-financed fund, the total came to 1.7 per cent. The new draft budget is for 1.26 per cent of GNI, but after deducting the money needed to pay down common debts, it’s a mere 1.15 per cent — an amount that will be further whittled down in talks. A proposal to spend one-third less of an already tiny share of resources makes a mockery of all the strategic evangelising. This is a budget that ensures continued geopolitical marginalisation."}],[{"start":282.98,"text":"As the great American philosophers Ralph Waldo Emerson and Omar Little have argued, if you “come at the king, you best not miss”. If the EU wants to hold its own in world affairs, it must give itself the resources for it. Getting more now will be much harder after its initial lowballing. Success is more likely for off-budget ideas such as the EPC’s, common borrowing for a sovereign wealth fund and a delay to paying down existing debt to free up funds. Both EU and national leaders accept they face unprecedented, perhaps existential, risks. They must now admit those cannot be addressed on the cheap."}],[{"start":332.24,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1753724822_6924.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

苏格兰“威士忌湖”再现

由于苏格兰酿酒厂库存过剩,一些酒厂被迫暂停或缩减生产规模,这引发了人们对乡村经济的担忧。

年度关键词:AI泡沫

硅谷与华尔街的“高阶祭司”们开始承认大型科技股估值的确有些过火。

FT社评:英国资产折价,外资收购的盛宴与隐忧

外资收购金额激增,既映照出资产的优质底色,也暴露出其仍在折价交易的现实。

特朗普任命美国格陵兰岛特使

杰夫•兰德里的角色凸显了美国总统控制北极岛屿的决心。

福特押注“未来卡车”的电动化如何导致195亿美元减记

F-150 Lightning的经济账算不拢,也折射出全行业对美国电动汽车普及速度的误判。

一周展望:金融市场会在最后关头上演“圣诞行情”吗?

由于担忧人工智能公司的巨额开支,今年的“圣诞行情”迟迟没有到来。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×