EU recommends end to energy support in 2023 to help fiscal policy

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By Jan Strupczewski

BRUSSELS, May 24 (Reuters) – The European Commission recommended on Wednesday that all EU governments end support measures for energy prices by the end of this year to keep public finances in check and stay in line with proposed new fiscal rules in 2024.

“All Member States should wind down the energy support measures in force by the end of 2023,” the EU executive arm said in its annual recommendations, the fulfilment of which now has an impact on getting EU grants from the Recovery Fund.

“Should renewed energy price increases require the implementation of support measures, these should be targeted at protecting vulnerable households and firms, fiscally affordable, and preserve incentives for energy savings,” it said.

Most of the EU’s 27 countries introduced various measures to mitigate the impact of soaring energy prices last year, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent gas and oil prices rocketing.

The Commission estimates these energy support measures in 2023 range from 0.2% of GDP in Greece, to 0.6% in Spain, 1% in France and Italy and 2% of GDP in Germany.

But with energy prices lower again, such support is harder to justify and would leave many countries unable to meet their net primary expenditure limits recommended by the Commission under a reform of EU fiscal rules.

Under the reform, which governments and EU institutions hope to complete this year, each EU country would negotiate its own debt reduction path with the EU executive, taking account of different starting points in the 27-nation bloc, where Greece has a public debt of 171.3% of GDP while Estonia has 18.4%.

The main instrument to control debt would be a government’s net primary spending, for which the Commission would set a path.

In its individual recommendations for EU countries, the Commission said the biggest EU economy Germany should keep the increase in net primary spending next year to a maximum of 2.5%, with second biggest France at 2.3%.

Third biggest Italy, which has slow growth and the second biggest debt pile in Europe at above 140% of GDP, should have the least room for manoeuvre with net spending in 2024 not rising more than 1.3%, the Commission said.

Fourth biggest Spain can raise spending next year by a maximum 2.6% of GDP, the same as Greece, which, even though it has a bigger debt than Italy, also has faster growth.

“We recommend that our member states move towards more prudent fiscal policies,” Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis told a news conference.

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