In brief: provisions of the eurozone fiscal compact and economic issues
This note describes the 'fiscal compact' agreed by 25 EU Member States in March 2012 and associated economic issues.
At the European Council meeting of 9 December all EU Member States with the exception of the UK agreed to participate in a ‘fiscal compact’ to increase budgetary discipline in the eurozone, enshrined in a new Treaty on Stability, Co-ordination and Governance in the Economic and Monetary Union. The principal change made by the Treaty is that eurozone members must in general keep their structural budget deficit below 0.5% GDP, as well as adhering to existing rules on debt (no more than 60% GDP) and general deficits (no more than 3% GDP). Following the approval of the final draft of the Treaty at the European Council meeting of 30 January, Angela Merkel described the fiscal compact as a ‘masterpiece’. Although a number of commentators have written in support of the compact, not everyone agrees: some see the compact as a misguided response that fails to address the root causes of the eurozone crisis.