Mario Draghi recalls the urgency for Europe to relaunch its productivity
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Mario Draghi recalls the urgency for Europe to relaunch its productivity

The 20 countries of the eurozone recorded growth of 0.2%, instead of 0.3% in the second quarter of 2024. Mario Draghi speaks of an “existential challenge” to revive productivity.

Europe has suffered an economic decline relative to the United States this year, which is likely to force it to issue new common debt to improve its productivity and strengthen its security. An “existential challenge”, Mario Draghi warned on Monday in a highly anticipated report.

After the success of the historic €800 billion post-Covid recovery plan, the EU should “continue to issue common debt instruments to finance common investment projects aimed at increasing the EU’s competitiveness and security”, said the former Italian Prime Minister, highlighting the economic “gap” that has widened with the United States.

170 propositions

“The investment needs are enormous,” he stressed at a press conference in Brussels in the presence of European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. Stressing the need for a “radical change” in the European approach, he presented some of his “170 proposals.”

The idea of ​​issuing a new common loan, supported in particular by France, remains however a red line for many northern European countries such as Germany or the Netherlands, which fear being asked to contribute more heavily to make up for the delays of the southern countries.

Mario Draghi acknowledges that such a project will only be possible “if the political and institutional conditions are met”. He first underlines the need to mobilise private capital to finance innovation through the creation of a real “Capital Markets Union”.

“Real disposable income per capita has increased almost twice as much in the United States as in Europe since 2000,” warns the former president of the European Central Bank (ECB), in this 400-page document commissioned by Ursula von der Leyen. The report should inspire the work of the new European Commission for the next five years.

A worrying slowdown in productivity

The EU has been mired in economic stagnation for a year and a half. It has weathered the crisis caused by the pandemic in 2020 less well than the United States, as was already the case with the financial crisis of 2008.

This drop is explained “mainly by the more marked slowdown in productivity in Europe” and represents a threat to its social model, underlines Mario Draghi.

“If Europe fails to become more productive, we will be forced to make choices. We will not be able to become a leader in new technologies, a model of climate responsibility and an independent player on the world stage. We will not be able to finance our social model. We will have to scale back some, if not all, of our ambitions. This is an existential challenge,” he stresses.

The 20 countries of the eurozone recorded growth of 0.2%, instead of 0.3% in the second quarter of 2024. Growth slightly revised downwards this Friday by the European statistics agency Eurostat

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