EU lawmakers approve $815B recovery programme

To receive their share of the money, EU members must submit their plans for the funds by the end of April, with at least 37 percent of planned budgets dedicated to fighting climate change.

European Commissioner in charge of the Economy, Valdis Dombrovskis, arrives for a debate on establishing the recovery and resilience facility during plenary session at the European Parliament in Brussels, February 9, 2021.
AP

European Commissioner in charge of the Economy, Valdis Dombrovskis, arrives for a debate on establishing the recovery and resilience facility during plenary session at the European Parliament in Brussels, February 9, 2021.

European Union lawmakers have approved an $815 billion (672.5 billion euro) recovery package of loans and grants to help member nations recover more quickly from the coronavirus pandemic, but countries will not receive the money for several months.

The European Parliament voted 582-40, with 69 abstentions, in favour of the regulation for the Recovery and Resilience Facility, the central pillar of the the bloc’s $910 billion (750 billion euro) recovery plan. The leaders of the EU's 27 nations adopted the RRF last year.

To receive their share of the money, which is linked to respecting the rule of law, EU members must submit their plans for the funds by the end of April. Each plan has to have at least 37 percent of its budget dedicated to fighting climate change and at least 20 percent to improving digital transformation and other actions.

READ MORE: Developed democracies fared worse in the pandemic, report finds

“In the long-term, this money is going to bring about change and progress to meet our digital and climate goals,” Eider Gardiazabal Rubial, a lawmaker closely involved in the negotiations, said. “We will ensure that the measures will alleviate poverty and unemployment, and will take into account the gender dimension of this crisis. Our health systems will also become more resilient.”

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So far, 18 nations have submitted their draft plans to the European Commission, which is in charge of assessing them.

Once evaluated by the EU's executive arm, plans are to be approved on a case by case basis by the European Council, which represents the governments of the 27 individual member countries.

The funding will be available for three years and EU countries can request up to 13 percent pre-financing for their recovery and resilience plans. Subsequent disbursements will depend on whether targets set out in the plans are achieved.

Once a proposal allowing the European Commission to borrow on financial markets is ratified by all member nations, the commission expects the first recovery fund payments could be made from mid-2021.

READ MORE: IMF: Pandemic to slash $22T off global GDP in 2020-25

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