Contents

Acknowledgements xi

Preface xiii

Franco Bassanini, Alberto Quadrio Curzio, and Xavier Ragot

Introduction xvii

Floriana Cerniglia and Francesco Saraceno

References xxv

Part I: Outlook 1

1. Challenges for Public Investment in the EU: The Role of Policy, Energy Security and Climate Transition 3

Andrea Brasili, Atanas Kolev, Debora Revoltella, and Jochen Schanz

Introduction 3

1.1 Public Investment in the EU: Trends and Outlook 4

1.4 Capital Transfers Are Set to Remain above Average 12

1.5 Security of Energy Supply and the Climate Transition 13

1.6 Energy Dependence Indicators 13

1.7 Improving Security of Energy Supply in the EU: REPowerEU 17

1.8 Conclusion 20

References 21

2. Public Investment and Low-carbon Transition in France: Not Enough of a Good Thing? 23

Meriem Hamdi-Cherif, Paul Malliet, Mathieu Plane, Frederic Reynes, Francesco Saraceno, and Alexandre Tourbah

Introduction 23

2.1 Public Investment before the Pandemic: On a Downwards Trend since 2010 23

2.2 Public Investment during the Pandemic 29

2.3 Challenges and Perspectives of Low-carbon Investment: The Case of Infrastructures 30

2.4 Modelling Framework: The ThreeME Model 34

2.5 Macroeconomic Consequences of Additional Investment in Low-carbon Infrastructure 34

Conclusion 38

References 39

3. Public Investment in Germany: Squaring the Circle 41

Katja Rietzler and Andrew Watt

3.1 A Decade of Investment 41

3.2 Some Progress since 2019 42

3.3 War in Ukraine and High Inflation 44

3.4 Stability Programme Suggests that Additional Investment Is Mostly Military 45

3.5 The Critical Issue of Local Government Financing 47

3.6 The German Recovery and Resilience Plan 49

3.7 The Way to Sufficient Investment Spending 50

References 51

4. NRRP—Italy’s Strategic Reform and Investment Programme: Sustaining an Ecological Transition 55

Giovanni Barbieri, Floriana Cerniglia, Giuseppe F. Gori, and Patrizia Lattarulo

Introduction 55

4.1 Public Investment and the NRRP-Italian Public Works Schedule 56

4.2 Ecological Transition and Green Investments in the Italian NRRP 60

4.3 Related Reforms 65

4.4 Multilevel Governance and the Role of Local Governments 66

4.5 Conclusions 68

References 70

5. Current Challenges in the Spanish Energy Market 71

José Villaverde, Lucía Ibáñez Luzon, Daniel Balsalobre-Lorente, and Adolfo Maza

Introduction 71

5.1 Evolution of the Spanish Energy Sector: A Retrospective Review 71

5.2 Public Policies for a Green Transition (2020–2030) 75

5.3 Current Scenario after the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Russian Invasion of Ukraine 79

5.4 REPowerEU 80

5.5 Final Conclusions and Policy Recommendations 83

References 84

Part II: Challenges 85

6. How Big Are Green Spending Multipliers? 87

Nicoletta Batini, Mario Di Serio, Matteo Fragetta, Giovanni Melina, and Anthony Waldron

Introduction 87

6.1 Results 88

6.2 Green Energy versus Non-Green Energy Spending Multipliers 89

6.3 Green Land Use versus Non-Green Land Use Multipliers 91

6.4 Conclusions 93

References 94

7. Europe’s Green Investment Requirements and the Role of Next Generation EU 97

Klaas Lenaerts, Simone Tagliapietra, and Guntram B. Wolff

Introduction 97

7.1 Overall Priorities 98

7.2 A More Detailed Examination 100

7.3 Conclusion 104

References 105

8. The Public Spending Needs of Reaching the EU’s Climate Targets 107

Claudio Baccianti

Introduction 107

8.1 A Sectoral View of the Public Spending Needs in the EU 108

8.2 Conclusion 124

References 125

9. The Investment Needs for REPowerEU 129

Miguel Gil Tertre and Bert Saveyn

Introduction 129

9.1 Drivers of Natural Gas Demand Reduction in REPowerEU 131

9.2. Investment Needs 132

9.3 Why Should the Potential for Natural Gas Reduction Be Higher than 155 bcm? 140

9.4 Conclusion 141

References 142

Annex on Price Trajectories between 2020 and 2050 for Gas, Oil and Coal 142

10. Public Spending for Future Generations: Recent Trends in EU Countries 145

Lorenzo Ferrari and Valentina Meliciani

Introduction 145

10.1 GFCF and EFG in the EU 147

10.2 Trends in the EFG in the EU and Comparisons with the GFCF 148

10.3. Comparative and Absolute Advantage: International Comparisons 156

10.4 Conclusions and Policy Considerations 162

References 164

11. Assessing the Quality of Green Finance Standards 165

Xi Liang and Hannah Gao

11.1 What Are Green Finance Standards? 166

11.2 What Are the Differences between Green Finance Standards? 170

11.3 Nuclear and Natural Gas as Green Investments? 171

11.4 Does Green Finance Product Deserve Public Financial Incentive? 172

References 175

12. Green Investments: Two Possible Interpretations of the “Do No Significant Harm” Principle 177

Claudio De Vincenti

Introduction 177

12.1 The DNSH Principle in the EU Documents 177

12.2 An Evaluation: The Need to Get out of an Impasse 179

12.3 An Open Mind Approach to the DNSH Principle 182

12.4 The War, REPowerEU and Taxo4 183

12.5 We Need a Flapping of Wings 185

References 185

13. Towards a Socially Just Green Transition: The Role of Welfare States and Public Finances 187

Cinzia Alcidi, Francesco Corti, Daniel Gros, and Alessandro Liscai

Introduction 187

13.1 The EU Initiatives to Address the Socio-Ecological Transition 189

13.2 How to Tackle the Persisting Social Infrastructural Gap in the EU 190

13.3 A European Golden Rule for Social Investment 192

13.4 Amortisation of Public Investments 195

13.5 Conclusions 196

References 197

Contributor Biographies 201

List of Illustrations 211

List of Tables 213

Powered by Epublius