Jeremy Cliffe Profile picture
Editorial Director & Senior Policy Fellow @ECFR | Formerly @OpenSociety @NewStatesman @TheEconomist | Also at: https://t.co/ywrF7IBvrK

Aug 24, 2025, 24 tweets

Just got round to watching Mario Draghi's speech in Rimini in the original Italian. It is easily the most important speech on Europe so far this year and I hope someone (@GillesGressani?) publishes it in English and other EU languages soon.

Some highlights:

- 1/20 Draghi draws a stark line where others (indeed, some in Brussels) prefer to fudge: between the EU as an economic regulator and the EU as a geopolitical power

- 2/20 He casts doubt on current under-coordinated and unstrategic defence splurges: "We have been pushed by [the US] to increase military spending [...] but in ways that probably do not reflect Europe's interests"

- 3/20 Draghi describes Europe as, essentially, a "spectator" where recent foreign policy events - from the Donbas to the Red Sea to the Caspian - are concerned

- 4/20 Draghi confronts the rise of populism in Europe, but asserts: "it's important to ask what the real object of this scepticism is" (and casts doubt on whether its fundamental targets are really European values like democracy, freedom, independence, sovereignty, equality)

- 5/20 He identifies three distinct shifts:

faith in markets -> industrial policy
rules-based-order -> military and geoeconomic power
limited states -> a new statism

- 6/20 Really important, this: Draghi brushes aside EU household gods. "we must not try to extrapolate past achievements to the future: [they] were actually responses to the specific challenges of that time and tell us little about our ability to address those facing us today."

- 7/20 Draghi notes that the EU's adaptation to the earlier, neoliberal era came naturally - going with the grain of a project built around opening markets, but that the challenges of today are fundamentally different. Spot-on observation.

- 8/20 He stresses that while EU's first decades could draw on memories of war & the goodwill of strong economic growth, those have both dried up (correct, but for my money this was the weakest part of his speech: as the experience in central and eastern Europe is v different).

- 9/20 Draghi killer stat 1: if EU reduced internal market barriers to level of US, productivity growth would hit 7% over 7 years (compared with current 2%).

- 10/20 Draghi killer stat 2: for all that Europe is spending more on defence, it is wasting vast sums of that investment. EU internal barriers amount to a 64% tariff on machinery and a 95% tariff on metals.

- 11/20 The result: "slower tenders, higher costs, and increased purchases from suppliers outside the EU... all because of obstacles we impose on ourselves"

- 12/20 Draghi argues that Europe cannot simply sit back as: "The United States and China openly use their control over strategic resources and technologies to gain concessions"

- 13/20 Draghi killer stat 3: while US investment in chips focuses on scale (projects from $30 to $65 billion), European investment is fragmented (typically targeting projects between $2 and $3 billion).

- 14/20 Draghi killer stat 4: EU highly unlikely to meet its target of increasing its global market share in chips from 10% today to at least 20% in 2030.

- 15/20 Plenty of European leaders are good at outlining the above problems. A difference is that Draghi is proposing solutions proportional to the challenge.

- 16/20 Draghi solution: 1: a "28th" legal regime for projects of common European interest and their joint financing

- 17/20 Draghi solution 2: a clear distinction between good and bad debt, as "only forms of common debt can support large-scale European projects that insufficient, fragmented national efforts would never be able to implement." 🎯

- 18/20 Draghi solution 3: a different European attitude. From hopelessness to faith in change; from despair at the future to confidence (NextGenerationEU, anyone?); from declinism to solutions; from crisis management to long-term vision

- 19/20 A dash of optimism: Draghi notes that for all of Europe's self-imposed brakes, "European firms are adopting next-generation digital technologies, including AI, at a pace comparable to the US". Imagine Europe with the brakes off.

- 20/20 Citing the Commission, Draghi sets a yardstick for European investments in the future: €1.2 trillion per year.

Daunting? Yes
Doubtful? Yes
Absolutely necessary? Also yes

Draghi concludes with his most radical message: one of European agency. "We can change the trajectory of our continent."

In English here ⬇️

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