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Pedro Sánchez is all too familiar with the difficulties of passing a budget in a
divided parliament - After a preliminary meeting in Luxembourg on Tuesday, Piotr Serafin, the EU Commissioner
for Budget, Anti- Along with 17 other countries, Spain has already secured a four- The NextGenEU programme was funded by the issuance of 750 |
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billion euros in debt bonds on international markets. These start maturing in 2028
- Whether to start repaying the NextGen debt now or at some unspecified point in the future will be one of the defining issues of Europe's next MFF. It has already set the Commission, which wants to start in 2028, against the EU Parliament, which seeks an indefinite deferral. Spain's economy minister Carlos Cuerpo claims that more mutual debt financing would save the bloc 25 billion a year. His fellow travellers include French president Emmanel Macron, according to whom it would be “idiotic” to start NextGen repayments in 2028, and Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who recently claimed that the EU has “no reason to do so”. Clearly, the maturation of international debt bonds is not a compelling reason for either leader. This profligate attitude horrifies fiscally conservative countries such as Germany and the Netherlands, who point to recent allegations that Spain has wasted most of its NextGen payouts anyway. There will also be heated disputes over defence spending and the classic issue of whether wealthier nations should receive rebates for their contributions to the MFF. It's likely to be a while before the Brussels negotiating table is a circle of smiles rather than scowls. |