Europaudvalget 2010-11 (1. samling)
EUU Alm.del Bilag 148
Offentligt
Saturday 18 December 2010
Letter to President of European Commission
A letter from Prime Minister David Cameron and other European leaders to the President of the
European Commission on 18 December 2010.
Read the letter
His Excellency Dr José Manuel Durão Barroso
President of the European Commission
Dear President Barroso
The next multiannual financial framework will come as Member States make extraordinary efforts
to clean up public finances. These efforts are intended to bring down public deficits and public debt
to a sustainable level in keeping with an enhanced fiscal and macroeconomic monitoring
framework.
European public spending cannot be exempt from the considerable efforts made by the Member
States to bring their public spending under control. The action taken in 2011 to curb annual growth
in European payment appropriations should therefore be stepped up progressively over the
remaining years of this financial perspective and payment appropriations should increase, at most,
by no more than inflation over the next financial perspectives.
A budgetary rule should be defined for the overall level of spending incurred by the European
Union over the period covered by the next multiannual financial framework, such that the level of
commitment appropriations is set at a level compatible with the required stabilisation of budgetary
contributions of Member States. Consistent with this, the commitment appropriations over the next
multiannual financial framework should not exceed the 2013 level with a growth rate below the rate
of inflation.
It is possible to implement ambitious European policies for our citizens if we have a stable volume
of spending. This calls for a better use of available funds. The challenge for the European Union in
the coming years will not be to spend more, but to spend better. This challenge can be met by
improved European spending efficiency, accurate tracking of incurred commitment appropriations,
seeking out where we can gain economic leverage and simplifying the financial framework.
In view of the above, we await the Commission’s package of proposals.
David Cameron, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Angela Merkel, Federal Chancellor of Germany
Nicolas Sarkozy, President of the French Republic
Mark Rutte, Prime Minister of the Netherlands
Mari Kiviniemi, Prime Minister of Finland