Brussels, BELGIUM
European Union Chief, Ursula von der Leyen,
will on Wednesday propose a roughly one-trillion-euro post-virus recovery fund
for Europe, but will have to win over sceptical member states.European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has won the backing of Germany and France to raise 500 billion euros on financial markets to deal with the economic impact of COVID-19
The
global coronavirus outbreak has thrust the EU into its deepest ever recession,
and Von der Leyen's proposal will set out to help the worst affected countries.
The virus
has killed at least 172,000 people in Europe and put its economy in a deep
freeze, with businesses only slowly reopening and tight controls on borders
that were once wide open for travel and trade.
Italy
and Spain were Europe's first victims of the outbreak and, still burdened with
heavy debts, lack the firepower of Germany and others to rebuild their
shattered economies.
The
European Commission, the EU's executive arm, has won the crucial backing of
Germany and France to raise 500 billion euros ($550 billion) on financial
markets to begin to fix the problem.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel dropped a bombshell last week by approving an idea
that partly reverses Berlin's staunch opposition to joint borrowing by EU
members.
Merkel, who
is in the final years of a long stint as German chancellor, also backs the EU
helping virus-struck countries with grants rather than loans, another policy
U-turn by Berlin.
But the French-German plan faces a
counter-proposal from the so-called Frugal Four: northern EU member states who
have traditionally opposed giving more cash to Brussels or transferring it to
the indebted south.
They
firmly oppose paying out aid in grants, preferring loans that come with stern
conditions and outside oversight, and reduce risk to their own taxpayers.
They
also accuse southern Europeans of living beyond their means and piling on debt
instead of choosing fiscal reform.
The
grants versus loans debate is no small matter, with Italy, Greece and Spain
already crippled by mountains of debt, despite embarking on painful reforms
since the 2008 financial crisis.
European
Central Bank Vice-President Luis de Guindos on Tuesday warned that more debts
incurred by countries already under pressure could spook the markets and endanger
the euro single currency.
The
European Central Bank (ECB) strongly backs joint borrowing by the EU to check
that threat.
Janis
Emmanouilidis, of the Brussels-based think tank European Policy Center, said
the French-German proposal, "makes it difficult for others to resist
compromise."
Still, given the frugals' approach, "you
just know how far away we're still from an EU-27 compromise .... strong
infighting is ahead," he said.
A
top EU official said that Von der Leyen's compromise would propose about one
trillion euros through a mix of grants and loans.
Von
der Leyen will first deliver the plan to the European Parliament before hosting
a news conference and then devote the next weeks and months to tough
negotiations with EU nations and MEPs.
Diplomats
predict talks could drag on until at least July, while experts do not expect an
agreement before September -- when Germany has taken over the rotating EU
presidency.
Financing
the plan could take even longer as it would require ratification by national
parliaments across all EU member states -- typically a risky process.
Von
der Leyen's commission has already delivered more modest recovery aid,
including insurance for strained partial employment schemes as well as
suspending rules on running up national deficits
The 19 countries that use the euro single currency have already made available 540 billion euros in loan guarantees for emergency health spending. - AFP
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