“Europe’s €1.8T budget fight just got real”

Let me make clear immediately that I have taken this headline from an article published in Politico yesterday written by Giorgio Leali and collaborators immediately following the conclusion of the informal summit of EU leaders in Cyprus 23-24 April. The article goes on to identify as a problem: “They still don’t agree on what it should do, how big it should be, or who should pay for it.” This rings very true.

So far, we have just two proposals for the size of the 2028-2034 MFF on the table. The first is that of the Commission. Shortly before the European Union leaders met, the Budget Committee of the European Parliament came up with its Interim Report on the next MFF. This sets out the Parliament’s view on the appropriate size of the next MFF. This will be voted on in plenary by the Parliament on 29 April and, once confirmed (which will almost certainly be the case), the Parliament will be ready to enter into discussions with the Council once it has agreed on its common position.… Read the rest

Reflections on the future governance of the CAP

On 9 April last I took part in a workshop organised by the Policy Department for Regional Development, Agriculture and Fisheries of the European Parliament on behalf of the Parliament’s Agriculture Committee on “The Multiannual Financial Framework and the Common Agricultural Policy for the period 2028-2034”. Elsa Régnier, a research fellow at the French think tank IDDRI Institut du Développement Durable et des Relations Internationales made a presentation on the MFF budgetary implications for the CAP, while my contribution focused on the future governance of the CAP.

The EP Policy Department has made a web page available that summarises the discussion, and which links to the presentations and to the video recording of the event. In this post, I reproduce my opening remarks to the workshop, and conclude with some reflections on the discussion. The opening contributions were limited to 8 minutes and for that reason were limited in the scope of the issues that could be covered.… Read the rest