Plenković: Croatia Expects to Join Eurozone and Schengen in 3 Years

Total Croatia News

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Source: Pixabay
Source: Pixabay

“The idea is to do both — accession to Schengen and the eurozone — by the end of this government’s term, so the second half of 2024,” Plenković said. “It’s tough, but reasonable.”

The European Commission said in 2019 that Croatia had fulfilled all the technical requirements for entry into the Schengen passport-free travel zone, and this should now be endorsed by other member states. Romania and Bulgaria have been waiting for this to happen for years.

In mid-2020 Croatia was admitted to the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM II), a key step towards eurozone membership.

Plenković said that because of the coronavirus crisis the eurozone members could be expected to continue suspending their own rules for fiscal discipline, while those on the path to join the euro could not rely on “such easy self-help tricks.”

He expressed regret that Croatia had “stepped away from consolidation and sound public finances” to limit the economic damage of the crisis.

Plenković said that his government would pursue two goals: “Using the recovery fund, the EU budget and private investment to generate growth. And the other one: Go back to the framework of 2017-2019, when my government achieved a budget surplus.”

The prime minister said he believed Croatia would be able to spend the first euro from the EU recovery fund at the beginning of next year, adding that it was a complicated process. “Unless it’s helicopter money, it’s very difficult and complex. You need a plan, a project, verification, tender, implementation, documentation. If it goes faster, we’ll gladly spend it, but if I’m realistic …”

For more about politics in Croatia, follow TCN’s dedicated page.

 

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