The treaty will be binding as soon as the ninth of the 17 eurozone countries ratifies it.
New treaty gets EU legal clearance, UK sidelined
The announcement comes as a blow for Britain, which had expressed doubts that the EU institutions could be used to police the new intergovernmental deal, agreed outside the EU legal framework.
The European Council’s legal service published a draft of the treaty intended to be submitted for signature by heads of states at a summit on 1-2 March.
The officials said they the new treaty text could be finalised by the end of January.
The draft treaty text broadly puts into legal terms the conclusions of the 26 EU leaders following the 9 December summit, including:
- A general commitment by contracting parties to maintain deficits not in excess of 0.5% of GDP, not taking inflation into account.
- An undertaking that sanctions administered by the Commission will apply for eurozone countries with budget deficits in excess of 3% of GDP.
EU officials, speaking with the authority of the European Council’s legal service, said that the Court of Justice would have jurisdiction over the working of the treaty’s balanced budget rule under Article 273 of the EU Treaty.
This article gives the Court jurisdiction in any dispute between member states which relates to the subject matter of the treaties – if the dispute is submitted to it under a special agreement between the parties.
Legally sound
The treaty will be binding as soon as the ninth of the 17 eurozone countries ratifies it. It will have a binding effect on those non-eurozone signatories only in relation to the simple balanced budget (0.5%) commitment.
The sanctions and full effect of the treaty will affect non-eurozone signatories following their entry into the euro area.
An EU diplomat said: “The UK would consider that an interpretation of Article 273, and would want to reserve judgement on that interpretation.”
But another EU official told EurActiv the draft treaty was legally sound. “This is coming from the top of the Council’s legal service. It does not seem to me that the interpretation can be in very much doubt.”
The draft treaty text will now be examined by a forum of about 100 delegates made up of representatives of EU member states and institutions on Tuesday (20 December).