欧州連合国家予算案の2014年ー2010年の1兆0000'0000'0000ユーロの予算会議では、欧州理事会は800億0000'0000ユーロの財政削減を固持。予算会議は、混乱模様! 財政削減強硬派と財政削減反対派が真っ向から対立!!
europa convulsa
La cumbre de la UE arranca sin atisbo de acuerdo
El Consejo Europeo mantiene un recorte del presupuesto de 80.000 millones
La propuesta perjudica a la periferia, con ligeras concesiones para Francia y el bloque del Este
Claudi Pérez Bruselas 23 NOV 2012 - 02:24 CET
convulsed Europe
The EU summit starts with no hint of agreement
The European Council maintains a budget cut of 80,000 million
The proposal is detrimental to the periphery, with minor concessions to France and the Eastern bloc
Claudi Perez Brussels 23 NOV 2012 - 02:24 CET
When matching an economic crisis and a political one thing is certain: come bad times. If you also need to add a financial crisis, a prosecutor and the threat of social crisis, it is likely to reappear old demons and European history is full, full of devils. In these are: the EU summit to agree on the budget framework for the coming years has started on Thursday with the traditional tension, with the Twenty divided and the entire theater itself of such conclaves. There is no possibility of agreement on the first night: European liturgy requires a good dose of drama. The pact is unlikely even at the end of the summit, which could be extended until the weekend. Simple staging, at least in part: the budgets of the next seven years will not depart too one trillion euros (1% of EU GDP), whether they are approved in the next few hours as if the deal comes within a few months. What is at issue is only sharing the cake, not its size.
Germany remains committed to raising the political banner of a united and strong with a minimalist budget, as ever dividing rich and poor, center and periphery: Berlin on Thursday demanded additional cut on the draft Council President Herman Van Rompuy, which in turn meant a snip of 80,000 million on the plans of the European Commission. Countries such as Britain, Sweden and the Netherlands demanded a snip even more, but to start last night Van Rompuy held his ground: adjusting left intact 80,000 million, but with a slightly different cast, something better in agriculture (a concession to appease France) and cohesion (to the demands of the Eastern bloc, the hardest hit by the cuts). There is also a game designed specifically to Spain: 2,750 million euros to ease the losses of European aid until 2020. In return, slightly lower investment in R & D and infrastructure border regarding the initial plans of the European Council, and spending is left intact in the European bureaucracy, which virtually guarantees a negative sound British if nothing changes this Friday.
moreHollande reaches out to Merkel to negotiate united EU budgetCameron, the veto or the calculatorThe rebate is nonnegotiable"Spain will get less because now is richer"Rajoy wants the European budget cut is "fair"Concern in the Spanish agricultural sector for funding cuts
The balance to be getting Van Rompuy is anything but easy. Contributing countries, with Germany in the lead, are determined to give back to the beneficiaries, of reviving old walls: this project is clearly damaging to the entire Eastern bloc, in need of funds to converge with the heart of Europe. Indeed, the division is broader: the old frame area, with Germany at the center and several satellites supporters even more cuts, leading that crusade for austerity budget also reach Europe. Spain looks set to leave injured, although you may get some pinch end that allows to save face. France and Italy also come to Brussels with veto threats, although traditionally a profit at the end of the negotiation because the big countries are essential to the agreement. And unlike previous negotiations, in which the budget was the mother of all battles, despite its very limited-figures, "this time the Union has far more pressing problems to solve," summarized night referring to diplomatic sources Greece and the fiscal crisis.
"Very difficult. It is very difficult, "said the entry into the summit French President François Hollande, annoyed by the snip in agricultural policies seem likely to soften. Hollande opted for a low profile: "There will be no ultimatum hope to reach an agreement with Germany," he told reporters. Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that Berlin "will defend its national interests" and left a notice to mariners: "In times of fiscal consolidation in Europe we have to concentrate on that expenses are not too large." For now there are no concessions, prompting the Italian Prime Minister, Mario Monti, to summarize what actually think each and every one of the twenty-seven: "We will not accept solutions that let's unacceptable," a statement of intent that found that among crisis of national interests come first, even theoretically most European leaders.
Veto threats are diverse and come from almost all sides: it is always so when it starts negotiating European budgets. Opposition clearer the UK, with David Cameron very pressured by his Parliament, requiring drastic cuts (much larger than those on the table) with the argument that these are times of austerity in the countries of the EU and would be incongruous if they were not also in the European institutions. A veto would give Cameron a great political mileage back to UK, whose citizens seem willing to give him back to Europe permanently. But accentuate the isolation of the island and would be more than a finding that the confluence of several different crises around predicts dark times of old ghosts captured in defensive approaches of asilamientos, exclusions, protectionism and others.
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