Blog post 252
Covid-19 and the Mobilisation of Public Development Banks in the EU
By Daniel Mertens, Professor of International Political Economy, University of Osnabrück, Eulalia rubio, Senior Research Fellow, Jacques Delors Institute, & Matthias Thiemann, Assistant Professor of Public Policy, Sciences Po-Paris
The debate over how Europe should organise solidarity and jointly respond to the COVID induced economic crisis is in full force, with various proposals either agreed or at debate such as the use of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), the creation of new common debt instruments or the mobilisation of the upcoming Multi-Annual Financial Framework (MFF). So far, however, the prime responses to the economic shock have been located at the national level, not only being proof of the fact that most firefighting is done at the level of Europe’s nation-states but also displaying the inequalities of fiscal capacity that still loom large in the EU’s political economy.
There have been various studies and reports comparing governments’ initial fiscal responses to the COVID-19 crisis. While there are differences in the size and composition of fiscal packages, a common feature that emerges is the strong reliance on credit guarantees and other liquidity support measures. Less appreciated in current debates is the fact that these measures are often administered and distributed by a specific sort of para-fiscal actors: development banks, or national promotional institutions. Even at the European level, significant parts of the common response to the economic impact of the pandemic rest on the European Investment Bank (EIB).
This policy brief highlights the key role these para-fiscal institutions play in Europe and reviews the similarities and differences in their responses by focusing on five large institutions (EIB, KfW, Bpifrance, CDP, ICO). It explains how these entities have worked as governments’ ‘little helpers’ in the European context of the past decade and points to key challenges that come with their role in terms of a coordinated and solidarity-based European effort. ▪▪▪
SUR LE MÊME THÈME
ON THE SAME THEME
PUBLICATIONS
How stringent would the new Stability and Growth Pact be? And for who?

The tools for protecting the EU budget from breaches of the rule of law

Macro-economic impact of the EU Recovery Funds

Declining birth rate in Europe

An ambitious plan without adequate financing?

THE NEXT REVISION OF THE FINANCIAL REGULATION AND THE EU BUDGET GALAXY

Europe, a partner to anti-COVID vaccination in Africa

From words to action

TOWARDS A EUROPEAN HEALTH UNION

EUROPEAN PUBLIC OPINION IN A TROUBLED 2020

Young people facing the crisis: bouncing back with the EU

COVAX: Europe put to the test of global vaccine solidarity

The budgetary stick to the rescue of the rule of law?

European Union governance in response to crises

Spending EU subsidies well:
A challenge for Member States

A European vaccine passport? A healthy debate

Europeans facing vaccine hesitancy

A new European Health Agency ? For what ?

Greening EU Trade 4:
How to “green” trade agreements?

Framing the state aid debate for the post-covid era the Brexit challenge

SURE or the EU to aid European workers

Building a clean mobility system in times of COVID-19

The new political economy of Brexit

Trade in pandemic times

A historic agreement, to be improved and implemented

Crisis Notebook

Jacques Delors Institute supports letters to EC Vice Presidents

An ambitious recovery budget, tough negotiations ahead

CRISIS NOTEBOOK

CARNETS DE CRISE

Le covid-19 remet-il en cause l’Europe de la défense ?

Greener after

Judges vs. technocrats

The race for a Covid-19 vaccine :
A major challenge for Europe

The EU budget and COVID: We need a “plan B”

Covid-19: the urgent need for stricter foreign investment controls

COVID-19 Crisis: An Occasion to Accelerate the Transition Towards a new Development Model ?

SURE : A welcome LYNCHPIN for A European unemployment re-insurance

The EU facing the coronavirus:
A political urgency to embody European solidarity

Overcoming covid-19 crises
by building a clean and resilient Europe

The health crisis should not eclipse the migration crisis

Solidarity within the Eurozone :
how much, what for, for how long ?

Health: a highly perfectible added value for the EU

Tackling the coronavirus crisis:
how can the EU budget help?

Fiscal policy-making in the time of Coronavirus

“We need a global alliance
against the virus”

Coronavirus
krach financier et krach politique

Corona: A European Safety Net for the Fiscal Response

The Member State compartment of the InvestEU Fund:
how does it work? Will it fly?

MFF negotiations: towards the end?

‘No deal’ Brexit and the EU budget:
beware the risk for EU unity

An EU budget in support of the next commission’s agenda

Innovation for the energy & climate transition

European Budget 2021-2027: how to escape from “business as usual”?

Budget européen, retrouver le sens du long terme

Negotiating the next Multi-Annual Financial Framework in an electoral year: which consequences?

InvestEU Fund: A Rebranded Juncker Fund?

Making better use of public funding: The role of national promotional banks and institutions in the next EU budget

Reinforcing the EU Budget with a fossil-fuel contribution

The Next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) and its Flexibility

EU budget: What’s the Cost of Europe?

Understanding the “Brexit Divorce Bill”

The possible impact of Brexit on the EU budget and CAP funding

The EU as a 3-D Power: Should Europe Spend More on Diplomacy, Development and Defence?

Are the spending priorities of euro-area countries converging?

The future of the European budget: What does the Commission’s White Paper mean for EU finances?

Making the Energy Transition a European Success

Extending Erasmus: a new impetus for youth mobility in Europe

Brexit and the EU budget: threat or opportunity?

Public Sector Reform: How the EU budget is used to encourage it

Investment in Europe: Making the best of the Juncker Plan

Is there an alternative to the European economic policy? The European Parliament response

Federalising the Eurozone: Towards a true European budget?

What would a European finance minister do? A proposal

A new road map for the EU

The adjustements to the EU budget

National budgets and European surveillance: Shedding light on the debate

Reforming Europe’s governance

Adjustment programmes in the euro area: mission accomplished?

Who calls the shots in the euro area? “Brussels” or the member states?

Non-Community European spending

EU budget: the path to an agreement

The role and place of Parliaments in a genuine Economic and Monetary Union

EU and growth: three pacts rather than one

European budget 2014-2020: seven years of bad luck?

Is the stupidity pact still stable?

How to maintain hard capabilities in times of budget cuts?

The EU budget: taking a second look

Britain and Europe – The last rites?

Spending better together: analyses and recommendations

Reforming the EU budget in times of crisis

Eurozone budget: 3 functions, 3 instruments

Which Institutions for the Euro Area?

“Fiscal Compact”, sovereignty and austerity

What European budget for post-crisis Europe?

European Development Aid: How to be more effective without spending more?

European guarantees to get out of the crisis?

The European “Fiscal Compact”: a goal or a starting point?

EU budget negotiations: need for a healthy and constructive debate

The “Fiscal Compact”: legal uncertainty and political ambiguity

The ‘TSCG’: much ado about nothing?

A two-pronged defence of the Euro

The Common Strategic Framework: adding value to rural development?

Debt crisis, sovereignty crisis

The CAP in the EU Budget: New Objectives and Financial Principles for the Agricultural Budget after 2013

Rethinking EU finances in times of crisis

Thinking the EU budget and public spending in Europe: the need to use an aggregate approach

Defence spending in Europe: Can we do better without spending more?

The “added value” in EU budgetary debates: one concept, four meanings

Report Haug, Lamassoure, Verhofstadt: Europe for Growth : Towards a radical change in financing the EU

Options for an EU Financing Reform

Comments on the CEPS policy brief “A new Budget for the European Union?”

Comments on the policy paper published by CEPS “A New Budget for the European Union?”

Comments to the policy paper “A New Budget for the European Union?” by A. Iozzo, S. Micossi and MT. Salvemini

Comments to the CEPS policy brief “A new Budget for the European Union?”

Comments to the CEPS policy brief “A new Budget for the European Union?”

Réaction à la note publiée par le CEPS “A New Budget for the European Union?”

Comments to the paper published by CEPS “A New Budget for the European Union?”

EU Budget Review: Addressing the Thorny Issues
