Remarks by President Van Rompuy following the first session of the European Council

28 June 2012

Financing the economy will be boosted by mobilising ca €120 bn for immediate growth measures: a €10 bn increase of the EIB's capital to increase the Bank's overall lending capacity by €60 bn; and a further €60 bn from the reallocation of unused structural funds and the pilot phase of Project Bonds.

What we have already agreed today concerns first of all the growth and jobs agenda, and here the key element is that we will boost the financing of the economy by mobilising around €120 billion for immediate growth measures. 

A €10 billion increase of the capital of the European Investment Bank will increase the Bank's overall lending capacity by €60 billion. This money must flow across Europe, not least to the most vulnerable countries, and help companies grow themselves out of the crisis. 

The other €60 billion comes first from the reallocation of unused structural funds (€55 billion), in particular for small and medium enterprises and youth employment, and second from the pilot phase of Project Bonds that should be launched this summer and will go to key initiatives in energy, transport and broad-band infrastructure (almost €5 billion).  

We have prepared the ground on how to stimulate growth earlier this year. It is not just about injecting money. Growth is the overriding concern in every aspect of our work -- be it improving the single market, tackling unemployment or promoting trade and innovation. 

The growth agenda is a sign of our unrelenting commitment. It brings together all the concrete measures that we will swiftly take, in each Member State and together as a Union. There is also a real commitment to continue to apply all our strengthened economic governance tools (such as the Country Specific Recommendations) and keep building up peer pressure. 

We discussed two issues: 

We all agree we need an agreement quickly, before the end of the year. We must make sure to have this important tool for growth up and running from day one of the next period. That is why we will be talking about it again at our meeting in October and presumably also in December.
 
Over dinner we will discuss the report on the future of the Economic and Monetary Union, that I presented earlier this week and prepared in close cooperation with Commission President Barroso, Eurogroup President Juncker and ECB President Draghi. The title of the report sums up our ambition: moving "Towards a genuine Economic and Monetary Union". The analysis is simple. If we are serious about the single currency, there is a number of steps that must be taken: in the financial sector, in fiscal matters, in economic policy. They must be accompanied by increased democratic legitimacy and accountability. We will talk about the timing and nature of the next steps.
 
There are certainly things to be done also on the short term. We will discuss this tomorrow in the framework of the eurozone summit. But in the current climate, a credible perspective for the longer term is essential to restore confidence in the short term.
 
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