EU to propose $826bn fiscal stimulus package

Bloomberg

The European Commission unveiled an unprecedented stimulus plan to tackle the worst recession in living memory and underwrite struggling Italy’s membership of the 27-nation bloc.
The government in Rome stands to receive 82 billion euros ($90 billion) in emergency grants and up to 91 billion euros in low-interest loans from the package that could be worth as much as 750 billion euros ($826 billion) in total, according to an official who asked not to be named. The program, which still needs to win the backing of member states, would be funded by joint debt issuance in a significant step toward closer financial integration, according to details of
the proposal posted on the commission’s website.
Peripheral EU bonds rallied on the news, with Italian 10-year yields dropping as much as 9 basis points to 1.457%, the lowest in almost two months.
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has spent weeks trying to come up with a response to the crisis which has shaken the foundations of the European Union.
Her challenge was to win round skeptical member states like the Netherlands and Austria in the richer North while generating enough firepower to turn around Italy, where spiraling public debt has raised questions about whether the country will be able to sustain membership of the euro or even the EU itself.
German securities erased gains while the euro snapped losses on the proposal, and was at $1.0979 as of 10.30 am in London.
Of the total amount, 500 billion euros from the package will be distributed in the form of grants to member states, and 250 billion euros could be available in loans, according to an official, who asked not to be named, in line with policy. To fund the package, the EU would borrow up to 750 billion euros on financial markets.
Spain, which along with Italy has suffered the worst of the pandemic, is in line for 77 billion euros of grants and up to 63 billion euros in loans. Greece could get 32 billion euros in grants and loans. France could get 39 billion euros in grants.
The news offered relief in Italy, the original European epicenter of the coronavirus, where the government felt abandoned by the EU at the start of the outbreak and fought to contain a surge of anti-EU sentiment. The reported sum is acceptable for Rome, according to two senior government officials who declined to be named discussing a confidential issue. Rome however wants to see what the criteria would be, and under what programs such funds would be earmarked, the official said.
The long-anticipated blueprint, which will be presented to the EU Parliament Wednesday, will form the central plank of the EU’s response to the devastating impact of the coronavirus pandemic. The outbreak, which has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives around the world, has hit every European economy, with the worst-affected predicted to contract by almost 10% this year.
The money would largely fund investment and reforms, while some funds will also go to significantly beef up healthcare and to the EU’s poorest regions to help them catch up. The bloc will also offer guarantees from its budget in order to boost private investments via temporary equity support to viable companies or more capital for sectors of strategic importance such as critical infrastructure, technology and healthcare.
If von der Leyen can win the backing of member states, it would be a watershed moment for the bloc, where financial burden sharing has long been one of the thorniest issues that’s held back deeper integration. It could quell concerns that a lack of solidarity is empowering populists threatening the EU’s very survival.
An agreement could also relieve some of the pressure on the European Central Bank, which has so far taken the lead in the EU-level response, pledging to buy more than a trillion euros of debt to stabilize markets.
The commission’s proposal follows a joint push by France and Germany earlier this month that asked for the EU to borrow 500 billion euros that could then be allocated as grants. The initiative marked a stunning volte-face for Berlin and signaled a major shift toward bolstering the union’s financial power.
Giving help via grants rather than loans has been a key ask by hard-hit EU countries such as Italy and Spain, where increased borrowing to fund the recovery could quickly push debt to unsustainable levels. But even with Germany’s blessing, the plan is bound to face pushback by the bloc’s more stringent members as well as small nations in the region’s east.
Following the proposal by Paris and Berlin, Austria, Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden released their own blueprint that would instead offer loans to countries rather than grants and would expire after two years, while they’ve insisted that any help has conditions attached to it. As net donors to the EU budget, the so-called Frugal Four are sceptical of a major borrowing spree that could leave their taxpayers on the hook for decades to come.
Meanwhile, poorer peers in central and eastern Europe are also wary of being asked to dole out more money, especially when they risk having funds redirected from them to richer – though harder-hit – nations.
Still, even some of these hardline governments have signaled in recent days that they are open to discussing recovery plans without dismissing any outright, leaving the door open to a possible compromise.

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