Paris and Berlin called on Tuesday, April 27, the European Commission to examine "as soon as possible" the national recovery plans to prevent Europe, weakened by vaccine failures, from being sown in the race for global recovery .

The EU, which agreed in July 2020 on a recovery fund of 750 billion euros (5.6% of European GDP) financed by a common debt issue, must take an important step this week since a a dozen countries are due to submit their plan to him, including France and Germany on Wednesday.

"We have wasted too much time"

"The Commission must analyze the national recovery and resilience plans as soon as possible so that they can be approved by the Council by July at the latest. This will allow the money to be paid before the end of the summer," said French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said Tuesday at a joint press conference with his German counterpart Olaf Scholz.

"We have lost too much time. Chinese growth has picked up. The United States is booming. The European Union must stay in the race," said Bruno Le Maire.

A message that was heard in Brussels: "Right now, the governments of the EU countries are finalizing their national recovery plans. And the Commission is working hand in hand with them on these plans, 24 hours a day" EU President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement.

The French government presented its national recovery plan on Tuesday, which details how it intends to use the 40 billion euros in subsidies from the European Union (EU) and the reforms undertaken to stick to the European roadmap.

Concretely, of the 100 billion euros of the French recovery plan, France can claim to have 40 billion financed by Brussels.

Of this amount, more than half corresponds to spending in favor of ecological transition, including the 5.8 billion plan for energy renovation, 6.5 billion dedicated to transport and green mobility infrastructure, or 5, 1 billion to be used for the development of green energies and technologies.

A quarter of spending must go to the digitization of the economy, with for example 2.4 billion investment to develop France's technological sovereignty or 2.9 billion for the digitization of training and investments in digital skills .

France is thus in the nails of the criteria set by Brussels, which set at least 37% of spending in favor of the ecological transition and 20% for the digital transition.

The European plan had also set as a priority the efforts in terms of social cohesion, education and institutional efficiency.

Paris thus submits 7.7 billion euros in spending in favor of research, the health system and territorial cohesion.

The reforms put forward by France

Beyond investments, Member States had to include a reform component in their national plan.

France had to show in particular its intention to carry out structural reforms, already long called for by Brussels.

In its plan, the government has taken over a large part of the reforms adopted since 2017: the housing policy, the climate law and the law to simplify public action and business life.

"A bit of a Prévert-style list", pointed out the chairman of the Finance Committee at the National Assembly, Eric Woerth, during a hearing with Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire and his Minister for Public Accounts, Olivier Dussopt.

Two major future reforms are also widely developed in the French document.

First, the criticized reform of unemployment insurance, the entry into force of which was suspended during the crisis and is now scheduled for July.

The executive also wants to review the management of its public finances, as recommended in a recent report commissioned by Matignon, with the objective of "returning to a prudent budgetary policy".

"We need to put in place a multiannual framework, with a rule of expenditure", defended the Minister of Finance Bruno Le Maire, during a press conference with his German counterpart Olaf Scholz.

Legislative measures are planned in this direction as of this year.

What about pensions?

The subject is sensitive: this reform project, started before the crisis, had put certain professions in the street for long weeks at the end of 2019.

The document sent to Brussels recalls the government's determination "to carry out an ambitious reform of the pension system", as long requested by the European institutions.

"We do not need any recommendation, neither from a European state, nor from the Commission, to be aware of the need to reform pensions in France", defended Mr. Le Maire. .

But "the pension reform does not appear in the technical sense of the term in these reform meetings that we have indicated to our European partners", then specified Bruno Le Maire during his hearing before the Finance and European Affairs committees. of the National Assembly.

The government does not give a precise timetable, limiting itself to stressing that the social dialogue on this project should be relaunched "as soon as the improvement of the health and economic situation allows it".

With AFP

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