
EU Faces Budget Crossroads Ahead of Crucial Proposal
The European Commission prepares to unveil its Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) proposal for 2028-2034 next week amid growing tensions between member states and EU institutions. The €1+ trillion budget faces competing demands for defense funding versus traditional cohesion policies.
Understanding the MFF Mechanism
The MFF sets the EU's seven-year spending priorities and ceilings. The current €1.07 trillion framework (2021-2027) requires unanimous member state approval and Parliament consent. Funding comes from national contributions (70%), import tariffs, VAT shares, and emerging sources like the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism.
Controversial Proposed Changes
The Commission's draft suggests consolidating cohesion and agricultural funds into national plans mirroring post-pandemic recovery models. This would grant governments direct control over 66% of the budget. However, 14 member states including Bulgaria, Croatia and Slovenia oppose this, warning it could exacerbate regional inequalities.
Divided Positions Emerge
Frugal states like Sweden advocate reallocating cohesion funds: "Some regions receiving funds aren't as poor as 15 years ago," stated Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson. Conversely, Parliament's Renew group demands budget increases beyond the current €180 billion/year ceiling. The S&D group successfully fought to preserve the European Social Fund+, calling it "Europe's soul".
Defense vs. Green Funding Tensions
May's parliamentary resolution insists defense spending "cannot come at cohesion's expense." Environmental groups fear climate programs may suffer as security becomes prioritized, despite the current MFF's 30% climate spending mandate.
Negotiation Battle Lines Drawn
With the Commission seeking simplification and Parliament pushing expansion, next week's proposal triggers a complex negotiation phase. Key conflicts center on:
- Centralized vs. national fund management
- Defense funding sources
- Cohesion program reductions
- Green investment guarantees
The outcome will shape Europe's fiscal priorities through 2034.