Commission published state of play on the EU economic governance "six pack"

28 September 2011

The legislative package contains the most comprehensive reinforcement of economic governance in the EU and the euro area since the launch of the Economic and Monetary Union. The EP has given it final agreement and voted to adopt the package.

The package has two main objectives:

1. Stronger preventive and corrective action to ensure fiscal sustainability

Member States must regard their fiscal policies as a matter of common concern and avoid excessive deficits. These rules are enshrined in the Treaties and detailed in the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP). The preventive arm of the SGP (based on Article 121 of the Treaty) aims to provide guidance ex ante to ensure that fiscal policy making is consistent with fiscal sustainability. To this effect, each year Member States set out in their budgetary plans the measures needed to achieve their medium-term budgetary objectives (MTO) in their Stability or Convergence Programmes (SCP).

The new governance system introduces changes in three key areas:

i) Stronger preventive arm

ii) Excessive Deficit Procedure

The Excessive Deficit Procedure (EDP) implements the obligations in the Treaty for Member States to keep deficits below 3 per cent of GDP and government debt below or sufficiently declining towards 60 per cent of GDP. The high debt-to-GDP ratios reached in many Member States already before the crisis, and the related sovereign debt problems in some, show that the existing EDP was not effective in curbing debt developments. The Commission has proposed giving teeth to the corrective part of the SGP through a numerical benchmark for debt reduction and stepping up financial sanctions for euro area Member States. The two key changes concerning the EDP are:

iii) National budgetary frameworks

The reform of the SGP is complemented by a new Directive on national budgetary frameworks. It is increasingly clear that the structures and processes in place in the Member States which determine how fiscal policy is undertaken are key to the fiscal decisions taken. Setting minimum requirements for their quality and for consistency with the common fiscal framework of the EU, the Directive will trigger a substantial improvement of the budgetary decisions of those Member States where institutional weaknesses have interfered with their ability to ensure effective economic governance.

The main key features are:

2. Reducing macro-economic imbalances and promoting competitiveness through preventive and corrective action

Over the past decade, Member States have made divergent economic choices, leading to competitiveness gaps and to major macro-economic imbalances within the EU. A new surveillance and enforcement mechanism will be set up to identify and correct such issues much earlier called the Excessive Imbalance Procedure (EIP), based on Article 121.6 of the Treaty. It will rely on the following main elements:

Next steps:

Final agreement on the legislation by Council and Parliament will allow the procedure to be applied in time for the next European Semester (beginning in January 2012). The Commission aims at finalising the scoreboard design in the coming weeks, following the scoreboard adoption process outlined in the new legislation. Whilst EIP surveillance under normal circumstances will follow the European Semester timetable, in case of emergency,a special clause in the legislation means the procedure can be activated at any moment, allowing immediate intervention in countries where imbalances are more serious.

Throughout the six-pack, the European Parliament is given a key role in ensuring transparency, promoting accountability and monitoring enforcement at key decision-making stages through an innovative process of economic dialogue. The Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee of Parliament will be able to invite the President of the Council, the President of the Eurogroup, the President of the European Council and the Commission to present, report and explain their decisions in the SGP and in the Regulations on macro-economic imbalances. It will pay particular attention to occasions where the Council rejects Commission recommendations. It can also give the opportunity to an individual Member State which has fallen foul of the rules to be heard by the Committee.

Press release


© European Commission