Spend More or Do Less: EU Leaders Discuss Post-Brexit Budget Hole

Brexit
AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert

BRUSSELS (AP) — The leaders of European Union nations — minus Britain’s prime minister — met Friday to discuss how the bloc will cope with a multibillion-euro hole in its budget caused by Brexit.

The summit in Brussels will gauge the European Union’s ambitions as it sets a multiyear budget for the post-Brexit era, said Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite, a former EU budget commissioner.

The choice is “to increase the budget and find new resources, European resources or taxes, or to reduce some other old programs,” Grybauskaite said on her way into the one-day meeting.

Britain is set to leave the EU — the first country to exit the world’s biggest trading bloc — in late March 2019. But Brexit talks must be finalized by the fall so parliaments can ratify any withdrawal agreement.

The EU’s executive commission estimates that Britain’s planned departure will cut contributions by around 12 billion euros ($14.8 billion) a year. Britain has agreed to pay its budget share until 2020.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said last month that the EU’s 2014-2020 budget, which totals some 1.09 trillion euros ($1.34 trillion), is insufficient to fund the bloc’s growing ambitions in areas such as defense, tackling migration and border control.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte disagreed, a sign of divisions between some leaders that could presage acrimonious wrangling during months of budget discussions.

Facing pressure at home not to stump up any extra cash for Brussels, Rutte said the EU can keep costs under control by modernizing programs.

“We spend a lot in Europe. There are good reasons for that,” he said. “But the amount does not have to rise.”

Brexit won’t only cause financial headaches; leaders were also expected to agree to slim down the European parliament from 751 seats to 705 and redistribute seats relinquished by departing British lawmakers.

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