The investment plan, launched in the middle of 2015, aims to
attract private funds to finance investments, the riskier parts
of which are covered by the European Fund for Strategic
Investment (EFSI) using 21 billion euros of public money.
The plan has already triggered 241 billion euros in investments,
or three-quarters of the target, Katainen said, creating some
300,000 jobs. The scheme will be extended until 2020 and is to
generate some 500 billion in investment.
A report last October said nearly all the money spent by then
had gone to the 15 richest countries in the bloc - including
Germany, France, Italy and Spain - leaving the other 13 poorer
ones out in the cold.
But Katainen said the EFSI and the European Investment Bank (EIB),
which is part of the scheme, have made efforts to make the
distribution more balanced.
When measured by total investment set to be triggered by the
EFSI as a proportion of a country's GDP, the biggest
beneficiaries of the plan now included many of the poorer
regions of the EU.
The top 10 beneficiaries of the program measured in this way
were Estonia, Bulgaria, Portugal, Greece, Spain, Finland,
Lithuania, Latvia, Italy, and Poland, Katainen said.
(Reporting By Jan Strupczewski; Editing by Richard Balmforth)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|
|