Next Generation EU: New publication
Next Generation EU and its crucial part, Recovery and Resilience Facility, promise to bring an era of growth to the European Union. Can this promise be fulfilled, and if so, at what cost?
We would like to share with you and draw your attention to the new publication by the Slovak Institute of Economic and Social Studies (INESS) called Next Generation EU: Why We Should Be Concerned about the Recovery Plan. The publication pinpoints 10 reasons why the NGEU may have much lesser effect than anticipated by the public and politicians and what kind of economic damage it can cause for the future.
All parts can be freely reproduced.
Executive summary
Next Generation EU does not only bring billions, it also imposes a burden on entire generations of citizens, tax payers, and entrepreneurs. The following lines contain several categories of problems brought about by the NGEU. These include:
- Sudden EU centralization
- Permanent temporariness
- Pandemic as a pretend justification
- One size doesn´t fit all
- Unrealistic amounts of money for efficient absorption
- Growing bureaucratic apparatus
- EU becomes more isolated from global markets
- Increased central planning
- Lack of motivation for true reforms
- The adverse effects of new taxes
Our main conclusion is that big issues faced by Member States (social systems unable to face demographic changes; states´ inefficient management of entire sectors; slowing down the reconstruction of declining sectors, etc.) and by the EU itself (wasting resources; inefficient additional schemes; inefficient agricultural policy, etc.) remain unresolved. They are still present and NGEU can only conceal this fact for so long.