Much of the money is to go to Italy and Spain, the worst
affected by the pandemic, which together would receive 313
billion euros in grants and loans.
The aim is also to protect the European Union's single market of
450 million people from being splintered by divergent economic
growth and wealth levels as the 27-nation bloc emerges from its
deepest-ever recession, which is expected this year.
Of the 750 billion euros, two-thirds would be in grants financed
by joint borrowing and one-third in loans.
The grants, although controversial, are needed because Italy,
Spain, Greece, France and Portugal already have high debt and
are heavily reliant on tourism that was brought to a halt the
pandemic. They will find it more difficult than more frugal
northern nations to restart their economies through borrowing.
The euro <EUR=> rose on the news to trade at 1.1022 against the
dollar, up from 1.0932.
The recovery fund package is in addition to the EU's long-term
budget for 2021-27, which the Commission will propose being set
at 1.100 trillion euros, is virtually the same as the proposal
discussed by leaders in February of 1.095 trillion.
"In total, this European Recovery Plan will put 1.85 trillion
euros to help kick-start our economy and ensure Europe bounces
forward," the EU executive said in a document titled "Europe's
moment: Repair and Prepare for the Next Generation".
CONCERN
The 500 billion euros in grants is in line with the wishes of
the EU's two biggest economies - France and Germany - though
some nations would rather see the recovery package comprise only
loans.
The borrowing will have to be repaid, meaning higher national
contributions to the EU budget in the future or new taxes
assigned to the EU.
The Commission proposed new revenues in the form of a tax on
plastics, some money from the CO2 emissions trading scheme, a
digital services tax, a part of national corporate taxes and an
import levy on goods produced in countries with lower CO2
emissions standards than the EU.
It also proposed the EU budget should get a bigger share of the
Value Added Tax paid by governments to the EU.
(Reporting by Jan Strupczewski; Editing by Gareth Jones and John
Chalmers)
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