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Title: European budget and 2007-2010 Crisis
Description: Detailed notes about the organisation and application of budget economics in Europe, from sources of revenues to uses in expenditure and various laws regulating distribution and problems arising from them. Also gives context and effects of the 2007-2010 European crisis, attempts at solution and ways it shaped the Europe we live in today.
Description: Detailed notes about the organisation and application of budget economics in Europe, from sources of revenues to uses in expenditure and various laws regulating distribution and problems arising from them. Also gives context and effects of the 2007-2010 European crisis, attempts at solution and ways it shaped the Europe we live in today.
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EU BUDGET
Top recipients: Poland & Spain
Farming: Denmark & Ireland (large
farming sectors)
Poor regions: Central & Eastern MS
Admin: Belgium & Lux
UK: Low receipts for its size (same
as Belgium which is hella smaller)
! source of tension & conflict
Huge political importance show in adoption process
EU needs financial resources to conduct policies
I
...
rather than all EU
Budgetary Principles:
o Specification: Every expenditure has definite
o Unity: all Exp & Rev found in 1 doc
scope & purpose
o Universality: Total Rev covers Total Exp o Unit of account: €
o Annuality: 1 yearly budget
o Equilibrium: Exp & Rev should balance
Limit to EU’s fiscal autonomy : budget cannot be used as fiscal policy (no deficit, no debt)
2 largest resources as national contributions
Limit to EU’s growth potential: source of legitimacy is MS, only MS decides upon tax / redistribution
of resources among themselves
Procedure (set by Treaties):
o Commission prepares preliminary draft budget
o Presents it to Council for amendments & approval
o EU Parliament amends a bit
o 2 readings by Council & Parliament,
o Parliament adopts it & President signs it
II
...
Agriculture: CAP, money goes to large landowners, but controversial as sector barely
contributes to EU growth
2
...
Internal Policies: inside EU other purposes (R&D, Training, …)
4
...
Administration: cost of running EU Commission & institutions
• Types of Expenditure:
o
Commitment appropriations: wrt operations that can be carried out over long period
o
Payment appropriations: expenditure effectively incurred of past shit
III
...
Common External Tariff: on imports w non-‐member nations
ii
...
cuz not taken account for in CET)
these 2 sources existed before, they are ‘traditional’, but their importance have fallen:
levels of CET lowered in WTO rounds
& EU enlargement, CAP reform, FTAs = large fraction of imports now duty free
! 2 largest,
iii
...
GNP-‐based tax: ensures that EU doesn’t go in deficit, completes gap taxpayers ultimate
Others: taxes paid by European institution employees (who do not pay national taxes), Financial
Transaction & Common Corporate Income tax, Energy levy on CO2 emissions, fines & surpluses
ex : UK rebate -‐ à l’époque v poor and small farms, so EU Budget didn’t concern them a lot
! discount on contribution, correction for UK redistributed to other MS (unfair)
These new ‘own sources’ would improve EU’s fiscal autonomy
IV
...
2007-2010
•Origins: Globalization shock
hella ES, US + EU import cheap input from Asia, lowers costs even more
positive supply shock in industrialised countries
downward pressure on inflation (“weapons of mass disinflation”)
in response to this, monatery policy lowers interest rates
Emerging countries have hella current account surplus
hella K flows towards EU + US, currencies overvalued, low interest rates
at the same time, big permanent imbalances in current accounts in many countries
•2004/5, supply shock seems to be absorbed
inflation in US+EU, CB starts increasing interest rates
As interest rates go up, housing prices start declining… end of bubble !
inter-‐banking interest rates soar though —> sub-‐prime mortgage crisis
Collateralized Debt Obligations created & sold => higher US i & falling house prices => crisis of sub-‐
prime mortgage then extended to normal mortgage => tensions on inter-‐banking market => fall in
asset values => liquidity crisis => banks BS deleveraging => Lehman Bros & Credit Default Swap =>
credit crunch => recession
First ‘signals’ of crisis erupted in Europe, as its banking system is largest
•2007/8, ‘Heart Attack scenario’
BNP Paribas defaults on 2 CDOs funds, credit crisis
liquidity crisis turns into a solvency crisis: Bear Sterns goes bankrupt and is rescued by JP Morgan w
FED loans
1 year later Lehman Bros bankrupt and is not bailed-‐out
Merill Lynch in distress, acquires by Bank of America, a commercial bank
After this chaos, Goldman Sachs & Morgan Stanley change status to commercial bank & accept FED
supervision
then crisis hits greatest global mortgage broker AIG & FM&FM
in EU, some banks to be rescued too
banks do not trust each other anymore, no liquidity exchange
inter-‐banking systems stop working
Negative effects went from financial to real side of economy:
Credit crunch: hella increase in interest rates = lower investment
Loss of wealth: value of financial assets & house drops = lower consumption
Confidence decrease: expectations get worse
Trade collapse: less money available to pay in advance invoices + D falling = lower net exports
Policy response was (conventional) monetary policy aka cut of interest rates to almost 0 as to
stimulate Investment and Consumption
+ ECB’s quasi-‐conventional answer
they cut interest rates, normal, but also modified implementation of policy by:
-‐turning minimum bid rate for main refinancing operations to a fixed rate,
-‐restricted the spread on marginal lending & deposit rate
-‐increased later on maturity of some main refinancing operations (from 1week to several months)
Buuuuuut whoops liquidity trap ! Need for unconventional tools
(Quantitative Easing + Fiscal policies)
From October 2008, coordinated actions of monetary & fiscal policies
CBs lowered down interest rate by more than 3% in a few weeks (conventional) and ECB’s shit
(unconventional)
+ CB’s new unconventional QE shit
+ EU govs used public resources to guarantee bank liabilities or to clean BS
Also sustained real side of economy through public spending and lower taxes
=> coordinated worldwide, shock therapy for whole financial system
then woo everything’s alright
B
...
•2010: Credit crisis becomes a debt crisis
EBC is hub, continuously finances system, while banks in peripheries sell assets to get additional
liquidity
negative feedback loop can be horrible
Maastricht Treaty did not foresee any mechanism to prevent all this shit
2 kinds of responses: Fiscal (allowing countries to provide mutual financial guarantees to support
sustainability of public debt & minimise solvency risks)
aka European Financial Stability Facility
and Monetary Tools (allow CB to buy from market sovereign debt bonds thus reducing borrowing
costs of MS and improving banks BS)
Title: European budget and 2007-2010 Crisis
Description: Detailed notes about the organisation and application of budget economics in Europe, from sources of revenues to uses in expenditure and various laws regulating distribution and problems arising from them. Also gives context and effects of the 2007-2010 European crisis, attempts at solution and ways it shaped the Europe we live in today.
Description: Detailed notes about the organisation and application of budget economics in Europe, from sources of revenues to uses in expenditure and various laws regulating distribution and problems arising from them. Also gives context and effects of the 2007-2010 European crisis, attempts at solution and ways it shaped the Europe we live in today.