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EU agrees multi-year budget

EU leaders finally reached a seven-year budget accord Friday after marathon talks driven by sharp differences over the bloc’s priorities for the rest of the decade.

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European Council President Van Rompuy addresses a news conference after an EU leaders summit in Brussels. Photo: Reuters

EU leaders finally reached a seven-year budget accord Friday after marathon talks driven by sharp differences over the bloc’s priorities for the rest of the decade.

“Deal done!” summit chair and EU President Herman Van Rompuy said on Twitter after more than 24 hours of tough talks between the bloc’s 27 heads of state and government.

“Worth waiting for,” he added, without giving details of the deal.

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Pushed by British Prime Minister David Cameron, who said the EU could not decide an increase at a time of austerity, leaders were looking at a cut in spending of around three per cent compared with the previous budget, according to a draft.

France, along with Italy, fought to protect spending it saw as essential to boost growth and jobs at a time of record unemployment.

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A draft worked out overnight set 2014-20 actual spending or “payments” at 908.4 billion euros (HK$9.5 trillion), with an absolute ceiling of 960 billion euros (HK$10.4 trillion) for spending “commitments” to the budget.

That is just one per cent of the bloc’s gross domestic product.

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