| Consultation: | Federal Committee Belgrade -Spring 2026 |
|---|---|
| Agenda item: | 1 PC1 |
| Proposer: | PC1 (decided on: 03/26/2026) |
| Status: | Submitted |
| Submitted: | 04/03/2026, 19:04 |
A7: Regarding the Creation of a Fiscal Union
Motion text
Resolution submitted by: JEF Political Commission 1 – Institutions and
Governance
Adopted by the Federal Committee in London on 23 March 2019. Re-adopted and
amended by the European Congress in Liège on 21 November 2021. Re-adopted and
amended by the European Federal Committee in Tartu, Estonia on 14 April 2024.
Re-adopted and amended by the European Federal Committee in Belgrade, Serbia on
19 April 2026
JEF Europe,
● Strongly convinced that for the EU to be able to act effectively, it must
eliminate the principle of unanimity specifically for the introduction of new
autonomous European taxes, while ensuring the harmonisation of tax systems1;
● Stressing that a Fiscal Union and a centralised investment capacity could
allow for economies of scale, thereby reducing the aggregate cost of public
goods; ● Condemning the utter lack of transparency and democratic accountability
in the EU budgetary process, whereby the European Parliament does not enjoy
equal powers in determining the Multiannual Financial Framework or raising of
revenues2; ● Highlighting the leverage held by Member States within the
Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), given that their national contributions
constitute the primary source of the EU budget;
● Convinced that the EU budget should be financed entirely by European
autonomous revenues rather than national contributions, to prevent Member States
from using them as a tool for political leverage;
● Noting with concern that Eurozone Member States are still exposed to
asymmetric economic or financial shocks, especially the Member States in which
public debt levels are still high and where governments are not endowed with
enough fiscal space to enact counter-cyclical policies;
● Convinced, therefore, of the need to strengthen the Eurozone through the
creation of a real Fiscal Union;
● Highlighting that cross-border tax schemes and fraud allow multinational
corporations to free-ride on the public infrastructure and services of multiple
Member States while contributing only to one;
● Noting that while economic and taxation policies should follow the principle
of subsidiarity, the Union must intervene when national frameworks fail to
capture cross-border value creation, for example with an European Company Income
Tax;
● Convinced that the fragmentation of national tax systems and the lack of a
common tax base impose higher compliance costs on European companies,
undermining their cross-border expansion and the integrity of the Single Market;
1 While the European Parliament acts as a joint authority for the annual budget,
its influence is constrained by the MFF. The European Council and the Council
retain primary control by setting the long-term political guidelines and
spending ceilings. Consolidated version of the Treaty on the Functioning of the
European Union, Part Six, Title II, Articles 312 and 314, EUR-Lex, Publications
Office of the European Union, EUR-Lex - 12012E/TXT - EN - EUR-Lex, 26 October
2012.2 Tax harmonization refers to the partial alignment of national tax laws
and the unification of tax bases.
● Stressing that the issuance of European debt should be coupled with a fiscal
union, as borrowing without sovereign taxing power incurs higher costs and
offers less favorable terms for most Member States than national debt;
● Underlining the necessity of tightening national fiscal rules, as the
transition toward a European fiscal union and common debt could induce moral
hazard among Member States, threatening the stability of the single currency;
● Believing that the mutualization of national debt into a single European
instrument will gain political viability only once Member States achieve
comparable debt-to-GDP ratios, thereby eliminating the risk of a free lunch and
ensuring equitable risk-sharing;
JEF Europe, therefore, calls the European Council to create a Fiscal Union
structured around:
1. Fiscal capacity, which is the power to raise taxes through an European Tax
Authority, consisting only of autonomous revenues to ensure the Union possesses
the independent resources necessary to fulfill its mandates without relying on
national contributions;
2. Budgetary capacity providing macroeconomic stabilization and funding
essential European public goods, such as common defense and energy
infrastructure; 3. Permanent borrowing capacity to issue sovereign debt,
providing a mechanism to manage economic shocks;
4. Tightened fiscal rules at the national level to ensure long-term
sustainability and prevent moral hazard within the shared fiscal framework;
5. The democratic empowerment of the European Parliament, granting it the right
to initiate and amend fiscal proposals, ensuring that new European taxes are
subject to direct parliamentary oversight and approval;
6. Harmonization of national tax bases to reduce the administrative burdens and
market distortions caused by divergent fiscal rules.
