Spending
The Commission's 2028–2034 proposal commits €1.76 trillion of taxpayer money, a 32% increase over the current framework. Every euro of it is ultimately a euro extracted from European taxpayers, routed through Brussels, and returned to member states with friction deducted. The question is not whether the EU should spend money. It is whether it should spend this much, on these things, decided this centrally.
EPICENTER's answer is no. Not because we oppose the EU, but because we take its founding logic seriously.
The single market test
The EU budget exists to make the single market work: to fund what member states genuinely cannot do alone, and only that. By this standard, the bulk of the proposed budget fails the test. Cohesion transfers and agricultural income support are redistribution dressed as investment, money moving between national accounts with Brussels collecting a fee for administration. The €409 billion European Competitiveness Fund is industrial policy by another name, with a track record to match: Northvolt, a flagship EU-backed green manufacturer, went bankrupt.
There is a better way. EPICENTER proposes a budget capped at 1% of EU GNI: lean, focused, and grounded in the EU's founding purpose. We support spending with real cross-border logic: research infrastructure, energy interconnectors, external border protection, learning mobility. We argue for returning agricultural and cohesion competences to member states that understand their own economies, and for replacing the subsidy machine with the deregulation that would actually release Europe's €8 trillion in dormant private capital.
A leaner EU budget is not austerity
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Cohesion, Agriculture & Maritime
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Global Europe
Administration & Pensions
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See how EPICENTER would reform the revenue side, or go straight to the full recommendations.