Spain Seeks 1.5 Trillion Euro Recovery Fund Using EU Perpetual Debt

Reuters
By Reuters
April 20, 2020World News
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Spain Seeks 1.5 Trillion Euro Recovery Fund Using EU Perpetual Debt
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez attends an extraordinary plenary session on measures to alleviate the consequences of the pandemic caused by the CCP virus in Madrid on March 18, 2020. (Mariscal/Pool/Getty Images)

The Spanish government will propose to its EU partners that they create a 1.5 trillion euro ($1.63 trillion) recovery fund financed through perpetual debt to aid countries worst-hit by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus crisis, a discussion paper shows.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez will outline the proposal to his European colleagues during a summit on April 23, in a bid to lead the negotiations looking for an acceptable solution after the Netherlands and Germany ruled out common debt issuance, a foreign ministry source told Reuters.

The new fund proposed by Spain would be financed by perpetual debt backed by the EU budget, and countries would count it as transfers and not debt.

“It would be a different mutualization scheme than we had in mind … but it is an option that can be agreed by all,” the source said.

SPAIN-HEALTH-VIRUS-HOSPITAL
Healthcare workers wearing face masks observe three minutes of silence in memory of COVID-19 victims outside La Fe hospital in Valencia, Spain, on April 19, 2020. (Jose Jordan/AFP via Getty Images)
NTD Photo
Amid a national lockdown to stop the spread of the CCP virus, a biologist wearing a mask and gloves cleans the enclosure of humboldt penguins at the closed Aquarium in Barcelona, Spain, on April 17, 2020. (Pau Barrena /AFP via Getty Images)

The European Commission would act as the main borrower in the scheme that would use the EU budget as a last resort to leverage the new debt.

The Spanish proposal is aligned with that presented by EU Budget Commissioner Johannes Hahn.

According to the three-page Spanish discussion paper, seen by Reuters, the transfer of funds should be frontloaded to start on the first day of 2021 and be executed during the next two to three years.

Spain wants the repayment of the interest to rely on a new set of European taxes, such as a border carbon tax and other green financing.

Sanchez will ask the bloc to work towards a “full tax harmonization.”

By Belen Carreño and Inti Landauro

NTD staff contributed to this report. 

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