As the debate on the next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) intensifies, the question of how to finance EU-wide priorities has become increasingly urgent. With NextGenerationEU and its main spending instrument, the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF), the EU has for the first time issued large volumes of common debt.
Recent initiatives such as the Ukraine Facility, as well as discussions on a possible Green Deal or a European sovereignty fund, build on similar financing logics and reflect a growing role for EU-level borrowing.
This raises fundamental economic and institutional questions: Are Eurobonds and other joint borrowing instruments a temporary response to crisis or a building block of a more permanent fiscal capacity at the European level? How should such instruments be designed to balance macroeconomic stabilisation, market credibility and fiscal responsibility? And what are the implications for the EU’s system of own resources, national budgets and the governance of the MFF?
In this second episode of #ZEWlive: EU Budget Talks, we will discuss the economic rationale as well as the benefits and risks of Eurobonds and common EU debt. We will analyse how new financing instruments interact with the MFF and the EU’s traditional own resources, and we will explore options for repayment, refinancing and the long-term integration of EU debt into the European fiscal framework.
The webinar will conclude with perspectives on how Eurobonds and EU-level debt could shape the next MFF and what this implies for the future of European fiscal integration and financial markets.