BRUSSELS, April 24 (NNN-AGENCIES) — A plan for injecting billions of euros of emergency aid into Europe’s battered economies has been agreed by EU heads.
Meeting via video, they agreed to set up a massive recovery fund, closely tied to the bloc’s seven-year budget.
They also confirmed that €540bn of financial support would be released through existing mechanisms from June 1.
European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said the fund would mobilise €1 trillion of investment.
There has been bitter argument over how to fund the much-needed aid. But Italy’s Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said “great progress” had been made on Thursday.
Italy – which has had the deadliest outbreak in Europe to date – had urged its EU partners, especially the richer countries of northern Europe, to show more solidarity.
Leaders also agreed to follow guidance from the EU Commission – the organisation’s executive arm – on easing their respective lockdowns once the spread of the virus had reduced for a “significant period”.
Details of how the longer term recovery plan will be funded will be discussed at another videoconference on 6 May.
There had earlier been divisions over sharing the burden, with the Netherlands, Denmark, Austria, Germany and Sweden opposing France’s proposal on how to support Italy and Spain in their recovery.
But Prime Minister Conte expressed satisfaction with what had been agreed, calling it “an important milestone in European history”. The French president, Emmanuel Macron said that divisions remained.
“I’m saying this sincerely: if Europe raises debt to loan to others, that won’t live up to the response we need,” Macron said.
Ahead of Thursday’s talks, German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that her country was not seeing “the end phase but still just the beginning”.
“We’ll have to live with this virus for a long time,” she told parliament, adding that Germany should be ready to “make very different, meaning much higher contributions to the EU budget”.