Greece’s draft budget positively evaluated by EU Commission
Brussels: The European Commission after analyzing all draft euro zone 2024 budgets, reported that euro zone fiscal policy will be tighter on aggregate next year but several countries, including France and Italy, plan to spend too much, breaking EU recommendations.
At the same time, Greece’s draft budget was approved without any additional comments, while the Commission noted that it fulfills last July’s country-specific fiscal policy guidelines.
“The aggregate fiscal stance for the euro area is projected to be contractionary in 2024 on the back of an almost complete phase out of the remaining energy-related measures,” the Commission said in a statement.
The Commission forecast on November 15 that the aggregated budget deficit of the 20 countries using the euro would fall to 2.8% of GDP in 2024 from 3.2% in 2023.
This will be welcome news for the European Central Bank which has raised interest rates to record highs to slow down inflation. The bank had some success, but at the cost of also slowing economic growth to 0.6% in 2023 from 3.4% in 2022.
The 2024 draft budget assessment is part of the Commission’s task to monitor if governments break EU laws that limit national borrowing in a currency union.
The laws, called the Stability and Growth Pact, are now under review and the 2024 draft budgets are assessed using criteria that governments agreed on earlier this year, some of which are likely to become part of the revised EU fiscal rules.
The three main criteria are that governments should not cut investment, should withdraw energy support measures launched in 2022 during the energy price crisis, and use the savings to cut deficits to keep spending growth within limits set by the Commission and agreed on by EU finance ministers.
“Some Member States do not sufficiently limit the growth of net nationally financed primary expenditure, and some do not plan to withdraw their energy support measures fast enough or use the savings from these measures to reduce the deficit,” it said, adding all preserved investment.
The Commission said the 2024 draft budgets of Greece, as well as Cyprus, Estonia, Spain, Ireland, Slovenia and Lithuania ticked all the boxes.
Austria, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, Netherlands, Portugal and Slovakia did so only partially.
Draft budgets of Belgium, Finland, France and Croatia, however, were at risk of breaking the agreed principles.
“The Commission invites Belgium, Finland, France and Croatia to take the necessary measures …to ensure that fiscal policy in 2024 will be in line with the Council Recommendation of July 2023,” the Commission said, referring to country specific recommendations agreed on by all EU governments in July.
Such recommendations included the maximum net expenditure growth for 2024 — an indicator that is to become the key yardstick in the new rules, calibrated to gradually bring down public debt over a period of four to seven years.
The Commission is also looking at budget deficits — seven euro zone countries look set to have gaps bigger than the EU limit of 3% of GDP this year and in 2024, which is likely to prompt EU disciplinary steps next year after Eurostat publishes official debt and deficit data for 2023 in April.