The unfortunate EU foot-dragging on the Draghi plan - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
欧盟经济

The unfortunate EU foot-dragging on the Draghi plan

Europe’s competitiveness is waning due to inertia in Brussels and national capitals
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":6.56,"text":"EU capitals are watching with alarm as US President Donald Trump tramples on political and commercial norms at home and globally — while privately wondering if America’s misfortunes might open up opportunities for Europe. If so, the opportunities are not being seized."}],[{"start":26.24,"text":"A year after Mario Draghi’s doorstop-sized report urged the EU to improve its competitiveness, the former Italian prime minister warned instead last week that the bloc was falling further behind its global rivals. For all the efforts to bolster resilience in the face of Trump’s tariffs and demands for Europe to fund more of its own defence, Draghi warned that “inaction” on structural reforms by Brussels and EU states “threatens not only our competitiveness but our sovereignty itself”."}],[{"start":59.52,"text":"It was a damning verdict, but not unfair. Of Draghi’s 383 recommendations, including integrating capital markets, strengthening supply chains and aligning business regulations, an audit by the European Policy Innovation Council found only 11 per cent had been adopted. Deutsche Bank analysts found most progress had been in scaling up the defence industry, where the urgency was felt most strongly, and in areas of least resistance such as cutting red tape — though this had sometimes been done in ham-fisted ways."}],[{"start":97.56,"text":"European officials have argued that Ursula von der Leyen, European Commission president, and national leaders have been preoccupied with handling Trump’s tariff threats and wayward policies on Ukraine. The realities are more complex. Many of Draghi’s recommendations have been adopted into the commission’s work programme. In January, Brussels unveiled a Competitiveness Compass, condensing some of his core ideas into specific goals such as revamping capital rules to let banks invest more freely and joint purchases of critical raw materials. But the EU executive has held back from pursuing some of Draghi’s bolder ideas, such as joint funding for vital strategic industries and infrastructure projects."}],[{"start":141.64,"text":"That leaves it to national governments to finance most industrial policy and investment decisions themselves. Many key reforms such as those affecting tax policy, labour markets and pensions have to be pursued at member state level — where political barriers and national sensitivities abound."}],[{"start":162.52,"text":"Plenty of low-hanging fruit could, however, be pursued more rapidly. The single market remains far from complete; there has been far too little progress towards a capital markets union to create a deeper funding pool out of Europe’s scattered and shallow money markets."}],[{"start":179.82,"text":"One area that deserves a push is the “28th regime” — or enabling companies to incorporate directly under a pan-EU legal code that would sit alongside the 27 national legal systems. This would enable companies including start-ups to expand across EU borders without having to deal with new rules each time — allowing them to scale up much faster and unlock the potential that the 450mn-strong single market is supposed to offer."}],[{"start":212.16,"text":"Draghi also called for speeding up the review of merger rules he recommended, now being carried out by the EU’s competition chief Teresa Ribera. It is important to get reforms here right. But the launch of the review has slowed corporate activity as business executives wait for clarity before making investment decisions."}],[{"start":234.3,"text":"Where not all capitals can agree, EU countries should form “coalitions of the willing” to move forward with certain initiatives. Above all, the priority is to break out of the inertia that, as Draghi notes, is sometimes even presented as “respect for the rule of law”. In fact, he says, it represents complacency. Trump or no Trump, that is a luxury an ossifying EU cannot afford."}],[{"start":269.08,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1758511746_1424.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

中东冲突令航空业面对财务状况考验

Lex专栏:承运商受益于强劲需求和低廉燃油,但不断升级的紧张局势正威胁两者。

伊朗战争正颠覆天然气市场

战争持续的时间将决定天然气价格的短期走向。霍尔木兹海峡对LNG运输船关闭的时间越长,对天然气价格和消费国的影响就越大。

德黑兰实况:爆炸声与逃离的人群

人们普遍感到恐惧与震惊。有人在彻夜未眠后正在逃离这座城市。官员们试图安抚公众,强调基本民生用品会持续供应。

“欧佩克+”承诺增产但市场预计油价将上涨

“欧佩克+”同意自4月起每日增产20.6万桶,但分析师警告称,若伊朗持续冲突导致供应中断,增产对市场的影响将十分有限。

哈梅内伊之后,谁将统治伊朗?

据称新最高领袖的继任程序将按宪法规定进行,过渡期间将由一个三人临时委员会负责领导。目前并无明显的最高领袖接班热门人选。

特朗普在中东的“史诗豪赌”

特朗普对伊朗发起的战争以推翻政权为目标,是他任期内采取的最大规模的干预行动,预示着中东地区将陷入巨大混乱。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×