Spain just dropped the kind of proposal that makes fiscal hawks in Northern Europe break out in hives. The country wants the European Commission to borrow €850 billion per year on behalf of EU member states, a move that would dwarf every previous experiment in common European debt and fundamentally alter the continent’s financial architecture.
Economy Minister Carlos Cuerpo is expected to pitch the plan at the July Eurogroup meeting. The proposal, contained in a discussion paper circulated to member states, envisions a voluntary European Sovereign Facility that would centralize funding programs and create a genuine European safe asset.
The numbers behind the ambition
The EU’s current bond issuance for recovery, defense, and Ukraine aid is projected at around €180 billion for 2026. Spain is proposing roughly 4.7 times that amount.
The endgame is a common debt stock of €5 trillion within five years under full participation. Projected savings from this joint borrowing approach could range from €5 billion at German borrowing costs to as much as €25 billion once the target debt stock is built out.










