A-list
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
[A-List] EU integration struggles: UK budget rebate
The new entrants from Eastern Europe are going to discover just how
welcoming Uncle Tony is, once the budgeting gets going. As could easily have
been foreseen, the belt-tightening will affect the most needy most of all.
Meanwhile it's quite disgusting of Brown to play the British nationalist
card clothed in the self-righteousness of Thatcher. But no less inevitable.
What it underlines is the writing on the wall for the Commission as it is
presently constituted. And do not expect to see any significant protest from
France or Germany.
-----
Brown stands firm on UK budget rebate
By Stephen Castle in Brussels and Andrew Grice
The Independent, 11 February 2004
The European Commission declared war on the British budget rebate last
night, as it swept aside Gordon Brown's pleas for austerity and proposed a
big increase in spending to cope with the Europe's eastward expansion.
Setting out its plans for the EU's next financing period the Commission
proposed a new scheme to share out the benefits of the rebate, worth about
?3bn (£2bn) a year to the UK, to prevent its effects becoming "excessive".
In a clear reference to the UK, the Commission said that leaving the
situation unchanged "would significantly increase a bias in favour of a
single member state".
Ministers admit the Government will come under strong pressure from other EU
member states as well as the Commission to surrender at least part of the
rebate in hard fought negotiations on the EU budget. The demands will test
Tony Blair's strategy of "positive engagement" in Europe, which he argues
has brought Britain more influence.
But the Commission's move received a blunt response from the Chancellor, who
said the UK would defend the rebate, which was won by Margaret Thatcher at a
summit in Fontainebleau in 1984 at which she fought to "get our money back".
"The abatement [rebate] is fully justified," Mr Brown said in Brussels
yesterday. "We made that clear in Berlin [in 1999 when the last EU budget
was fixed] and that continues to be the British position."
All member states have to approve the next budget, which will run from
2007-13, so the UK can veto any change. However, its position will be
weakened when 10 new, mainly ex-Communist nations join the EU in May, which
will be forced to contribute to the UK rebate like all the other member
states.
The rebate compensates the UK for the fact that it pays much more into the
EU than it gets back, mainly because it receives relatively little in farm
subsidies. But other big net contributors - including Germany, Austria, the
Netherlands and Sweden - are angry they do not benefit. Hence the
Commission's idea for a generalised system under which any country would get
cash back if it is paying in much more than it gets back.
Mr Brown also launched a fierce attack on the Commission's spending plans,
as it outlined proposals which the UK says would mean a ?20bn increase in
spending by 2013.
In December, six net-payers into the EU budget, France, Germany the UK, the
Netherlands, Austria and Sweden said average expenditure during the next EU
budget period should not exceed 1 per cent of gross national income. The
current annual budget of nearly ?100bn is equivalent to around 0.98 per cent
of GNI even though the legal ceiling is higher at 1.24 per cent.
Yesterday the Commission suggested an increase well in excess of 1 per cent,
equivalent to 1.15 per cent of GNI in terms of actual cash paid out and
around 1.22 per cent if most cash allocations for work in progress are taken
into account. Actual spending would rise to ?143bn in 2013, around 25 per
cent more than the UK thinks is necessary.
Mr Brown described the plans as "unacceptable" and called on the Commission
to concentrate instead on "fiscal discipline and clear promotion of economic
reform."
But the Commission president, Romano Prodi, argues that, if the plans for a
budget freeze were implemented, the EU would have to shed some of its
existing tasks, let alone those of modernising the new economies of eastern
Europe.
"Making savings in the Union's budget does not increase national public
resources; it simply undermines the foundations of the house we all live
in," Mr Prodi said.
Yesterday's exchanges mark the opening shot in a lengthy battle over the EU
budget which will be finalised next year.
- Thread context:
- [A-List] Iraq: the quagmire deepens,
Michael Keaney Thu 12 Feb 2004, 13:02 GMT
- [A-List] US state: Iraq scandal,
Michael Keaney Thu 12 Feb 2004, 12:58 GMT
- [A-List] EU integration struggles: military cooperation,
Michael Keaney Thu 12 Feb 2004, 09:31 GMT
- [A-List] EU integration struggles: UK budget rebate,
Michael Keaney Thu 12 Feb 2004, 09:25 GMT
- [A-List] UK state: Northern Ireland,
Michael Keaney Thu 12 Feb 2004, 09:21 GMT
- [A-List] Fwd: [pga] Divisions and missed opportunities in Bombay,
Sabri Oncu Thu 12 Feb 2004, 04:03 GMT
- [A-List] Oil depletion, oil policies and growing nationalism in Argentina,
Nestor Gorojovsky Wed 11 Feb 2004, 21:52 GMT
- [A-List] EU/China relations: warming,
Michael Keaney Wed 11 Feb 2004, 16:07 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]