Scholz Warns EU Leaders It’s Time for Tough Spending Choices

(Bloomberg) — German Chancellor warned European Union leaders in a tense, closed-door meeting that it’s time to get serious about limiting the bloc’s spending plans as many push for new funding to help Ukraine and address migration.

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The EU’s heads clashed with each other and with the bloc’s executive arm late into Thursday night, the start of a two-day Brussels summit, according to people familiar with the talks.

, the head of the European Commission, is seeking more funding as it is running out of budget room following a series of crises including the Covid-19 pandemic and an energy crunch. Most of the funds will be for a mid-term financial package for Ukraine worth €50 billion ($53 billion).

Scholz set the tone early in a debate that dragged on for about three hours until midnight, saying that everyone is talking about spending money, but there’s no discussion about trade offs or what to cut, according to the people who asked not to be named on confidential talks.

Several leaders said there’s no political support for new spending, except when it comes to Ukraine, the people said. But even finding the money for Ukraine is a challenge given budget constraints in Brussels and in the member states. On top of that, the EU’s newest leader, Slovakia’s Robert Fico, joined Hungary’s Viktor Orban in rejecting new money for Ukraine.

French President Emmanuel Macron said after the summit ended Friday that he agreed with the commission’s priorities including on migration and Ukraine. “We feel that the amount proposed today is too high, so we have asked to work on reducing it,” he told reporters. “But I don’t think this reduction should be achieved by sacrificing priorities.”

EU member states are under financial pressure after the additional spending needed to address the pandemic and the impact of Russia’s war in Ukraine, including the energy crisis, and rising inflation. They also face the re-imposition of the EU’s fiscal rules next year, which will mean tighter expenditure control.

The planned Ukraine funding in a mid-term financial package includes €33 billion in concessional loans. Migration is another important priority, with €15 billion requested for reinforcing the external borders or new partnerships with neighboring nations. The commission also wants €10 billion to top up different areas and leverage funds to boost cutting-edge technologies, amid competition with the US and China.

Both Macron and Belgium’s Alexander De Croo called for budget discipline from the EU too. “We have to keep up the financial support for Ukraine, but at a certain moment the European institutions need to look at their own figures,” De Croo told reporters earlier Friday. “When countries are prompted to bring their budgets in order, the European institutions have to do the same.”

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The commission has warned that it would need additional resources to cover the extra borrowing costs derived from the massive issuance of joint debt financing the pandemic recovery fund, an amount that could near €20 billion but would be agreed on an annual basis.

During Thursday’s summit, several leaders reaffirmed their support for Ukraine amid concern the length of the invasion and the Israel-Hamas war could impact support for Kyiv.

Giorgia Meloni, who has long protested that Italy is being abandoned to face the burden of immigrants arriving from north Africa, said migration also needs to be a top priority, the people said.

Scholz sounded an urgent call late in the evening that there aren’t any serious proposals on the table — particularly for potential spending cuts — and that someone needs to begin working on this with member states in the coming days, the people said.

Public Rebukes

Bulgaria’s Nikolai Denkov said in an interview Friday he favored more money coming from member states. “We think that additional funding would be the easiest way, because the reallocation would create a lot of other tensions,” he said.

The stance taken by Orban and Fico in the summit also prompted public rebukes by fellow leaders. “Of course the questions were asked of them how do you see the future?” Estonia’s Kaja Kallas told reporters. “If we don’t help Ukraine, then what is the alternative? Really I mean, Russia wins? What happens next, why do you think you are safe? That’s a question unanswered by them.”

Orban told state broadcaster Kossuth Radio that the leaders wrestled with each other late into the night. “Hungary can’t and doesn’t want to bear the burden of any further financial support to Ukraine,” Orban said. “I see no point in sending money to Ukraine that was paid by Hungarian taxpayers to the Hungarian budget.”

During Thursday’s talks, the commission’s von der Leyen underscored the lack of money. She told leaders that the commission was forced to use 2024 funding to deal with the Slovenian flooding this summer, the people said.

Speaking to reporters after the summit ended Friday, von der Leyen said the commission’s priorities were broadly accepted. “The question now is where do you get the resources, and here it is either national contributions or it is so-called redeployment from the EU budget,” she said.

–With assistance from Lyubov Pronina, Veronika Gulyas, Natalia Ojewska, Ania Nussbaum, Jan Bratanic, Piotr Skolimowski, Slav Okov, Andra Timu, Katharina Rosskopf, Stephanie Bodoni and Jasmina Kuzmanovic.

(Updates with Macron, von der Leyen from sixth paragraph)

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