STOCKHOLM: The European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund on Friday welcomed the EU's proposals to overhaul its fiscal rules to boost growth, but the IMF called for more action.
The EU's executive arm unveiled the plans on Wednesday but they have sparked a rift between member states over how to encourage investment in key areas, such as defence, while keeping a strong watch over government spending.
The "frugal" northern countries including Germany want the rules to remain strict, while southern states like Italy say they constrain their ability to invest.
ECB President Christine Lagarde said the bank appreciated the "commission's effort to reach a compromise with member states because that is already unsure given the balancing act that you see in the documents".
Lagarde also pointed to the "differences and disagreements between countries because they face different challenges".
"(It) is a good proposal," IMF's European department director Alfred Kammer told reporters in Stockholm, but he said there was a need for "further action".
He called for an independent European fiscal council "that could look at methodology and can intervene on methodology, for instance, outside of the commission".
The EU's current spending rules say states' public deficits should not go above three percent of gross domestic product, and debt should stay below 60 per cent of GDP.
Those targets will stay, but there will be more flexibility through individual plans for debt reduction that are country-specific.
The EU aims to conclude an agreement by the end of this year and EU officials were optimistic that this could be reached despite the divisions.
European Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis said the 27 member states had a set a "very ambitious" timeline.
"At this stage it is difficult to predict how long the legislative process will take," he said ahead of a meeting of finance ministers in Stockholm.
The rules, known as the Stability and Growth Pact, have been suspended since the Covid pandemic. The suspension was extended following the war in Ukraine but will not apply next year.
German Finance Minister Christian Lindner was not concerned having agreement on the new proposals the end of 2023 because the current rules would continue to apply next year.
"While we don't have new rules, the existing rules apply and in this respect we aren't in a vacuum," he said.
The reform will be one of the critical subjects dominating the ministers' agenda alongside the EU economy, and inflation, which remains high in the eurozone. - AFP
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