MADRID, Jan 17 (Reuters) - German Chancellor Olaf Scholz
gave Spanish Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez no
indication his left-leaning government is ready to support a
relaxation of EU fiscal rules, even as the two agreed on Monday
to work closer together on European policies.
Sanchez had high expectations of Monday's visit by Scholz,
who took over from chancellor Angela Merkel last month, with
sources saying he saw their closer "ideological fit" as a chance
to rebuild Madrid-Berlin relations.
"The Chancellor and I note that we are entering a new phase
in our cooperation at European level," Sanchez told reporters
after their meeting, citing a "shared vision with this new
German government on social and economic progress."
"We coincide (in the opinion) that the fiscal rules are too
complex and hard to comply with", especially in the context of
the coronavirus pandemic, he said. But he added that the two
countries were not aligned on how to change the rules, known as
the European Stability and Growth Pact.
Madrid hopes to convince Berlin to support a more relaxed
set of eurozone fiscal rules also backed by France and Italy,
setting GDP to debt reduction targets at a more realistic level
and slowing the deficit reduction drive.
But Scholz, who leads a "traffic light" coalition with the
Greens and liberal Free Democrats, said that while "Germany and
Spain are close friends" enjoying good relations, it was too
early to review the fiscal rules.
Scholz said the bulk of the 750 billion euro ($855.83
billion) pandemic recovery fund, which was made possible under
the existing stability pact, still remains to be spent.
European finance ministers were meeting on Monday to discuss
when to return to the stability pact suspended during the
pandemic.
Last month, after talks with French President Emmanuel
Macron in Paris, Scholz said growth and solid finances are no
contradiction and can be reached at the same time.
During the 2010 euro zone debt crisis, Germany was seen in
Spain as a leading member of the northern European "frugals"
that imposed financial restrictions and looked down on
"spendthrift" southern neighbours.
Even without immediate progress, the Sanchez government sees
Scholz's visit as a start in breaking up of those two blocs, a
Spanish senior government official said.
Spain has not joined the EU fiscal reform proposal launched
recently by France and Italy, but still wants to change the debt
limits set by the current fiscal rules.
The latest data shows that the average debt to GDP ratio in
the euro zone is at close to 100%, from Greece with a ratio of
207%, to Estonia with 19%. Spain stands at 122% and Germany is
close to 70%.
"We need a new credible rule. Most of the big euro countries
cannot meet the 60% target," the Spanish source said.
Achim Post, the general secretary of the European
parliament's Socialist bloc and a prominent member of Scholz's
Social Democrats in Germany, noted that left-wing parties are
now leading Spain, Portugal, Germany and the Nordic countries,
and saw new scope for cooperation in Europe.
($1 = 0.8763 euros)
(Reporting by Andreas Rinke and Belen Carreno, additional
reporting Paul Carrel in Berlin; writing by Emma Thomasson and
Andrei Khalip, editing by Aislinn Laing, Ed Osmond and Jane
Merriman)