Battle over EU budget set to turn ugly
BELGIUM: Negotiations over the European Union budget looked set to
turn ugly Wednesday as a drive to ramp up 2013 funding ran into a push
to impose a decade of austerity on Brussels.
The European Commission is expected to call at 1100 GMT for a budget
next year of 138 billion euros ($182 billion), according to EU sources.
That would mean an increase of 9.0 billion euros, although officials
said the final figure would be subject to last-minute talks.
Diplomats warned that several governments including Britain, France
and Germany already find a 6.8-percent rise "unacceptable" at a time
that national governments are forced to impose austerity.
The EU budget is always chaotic to negotiate: a big bloc led by
France insists spending on agriculture is sacrosanct; while another led
by Poland maintains so-called "cohesion" funding, or investment in
poorer region, must be kept high.
Between them, these two primary EU policies account for 80 percent of
bloc spending.
After bruising battles amid tough spending cuts domestically for most
member states, the EU's budget for 2012 was agreed at 129 billion -- and
in February, the EU executive sought only 131.67 billion for 2013.
The Commission says the extra money now demanded next year is needed
to settle unpaid bills from its seven-year budgetary cycle, drawing to a
close with 2013. Diplomats say the "substantial" jump is a response to a
push by bigger member states who want to slash 100 billion euros from EU
spending during the 2014-2020 budgetary cycle.
At the same time, poorer eastern EU countries that normally benefit
largely from annual grants aimed at levelling out facilities across the
continent, are fighting back to maintain levels of investment. AFP
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