European Economic
and Social Committee
EESC PLENARY: Interview with rapporteur Luca Jahier on the EU budget 2028-2034
EESC calls for a more ambitious, inclusive and globally coherent EU long-term budget
The European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) has adopted its opinion on the next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) 2028-2034, delivering a clear message to the EU institutions: Europe’s strategic, social and geopolitical ambitions require a stronger and better-designed long-term budget.
What are the main findings and recommendations of this opinion?
The EESC’s first key finding concerns the overall volume of the MFF. While acknowledging the European Commission’s proposed nominal increase, the Committee stresses that, once inflation and the repayment of NextGenerationEU debt are considered, real resources would remain largely unchanged. This is insufficient to close persistent investment gaps in strategic autonomy, competitiveness, social cohesion, climate action, security and defence. Drawing on recent institutional reports, the EESC calls for a substantial increase in real resources relative to gross national income and for stronger EU-level investment in European public goods, which cannot be delivered effectively by Member States alone.
A second major concern relates to the structure and governance of EU funding. The EESC strongly opposes the proposed reductions to cohesion policy and the Common Agricultural Policy, underlining their proven contribution to economic, social and territorial convergence. It also raises serious reservations about the planned merger of several major policy areas into a single National and Regional Partnership Plan, as is currently proposed, warning that this risks excessive centralisation and weaker stakeholder involvement. The Committee therefore calls for a reinforced partnership principle, mandatory participation mechanisms, adequate support for capacity-building and safeguards where effective involvement is lacking.
The opinion also addresses revenues, competitiveness and democratic resilience. While welcoming the introduction of new EU own resources, the EESC calls for greater ambition and closer alignment with EU policy objectives. It supports EU emissions trading system ETS- and Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism CBAM-based revenues, subject to transitional support for energy-intensive sectors, but expresses strong reservations about the proposed Corporate Resource for Europe, recommending instead the reintroduction of a digital services tax. On competitiveness, the Committee stresses that competitiveness must go hand in hand with social fairness, equal access to funding and strong investment in research, innovation, skills and infrastructure. Adequate financing for civil society and media programmes is highlighted as essential democratic infrastructure.
Finally, the EESC welcomes the reinforced Global Europe pillar, stressing that increased funding for external action must support strategic autonomy, enlargement and neighbourhood stability, while strengthening the Global Gateway as a coherent instrument for multilateral engagement.
After the adoption of this opinion, what will you do to promote it?
Following the adoption of the opinion, the EESC will actively promote its recommendations through dialogue with the European Commission, the European Parliament, the Council and key stakeholders, ensuring that organised civil society contributes meaningfully to the negotiations on the EU’s next long-term budget.
Luca JAHIER (Italy)
EESC rapporteur, ECO/683 Multiannual financial framework 2028-2034
Member, EESC Civil Society Organisations' Group
Former EESC President (2018-2020)
EU Policy Advisor, Christian Associations of Italian Workers (ACLI)