Analyse
By 2021, the EU had indeed launched major initiatives aligning with Lagarde’s description: the **€750B NextGenerationEU** recovery fund (37% earmarked for green transitions, 20% for digitalization), the **Digital Decade 2030** targets, and the **European Green Deal**. However, 'more integrated' was debatable—fiscal union remained limited (e.g., no Eurobonds), and national disagreements persisted on issues like rule-of-law conditionality. Implementation of digital/green goals was also in early stages, with member states lagging on milestones (e.g., only **12% of recovery funds disbursed** by late 2021).
Achtergrond
Lagarde’s remarks followed the EU’s **2020 recovery package**, a response to COVID-19’s economic fallout, which explicitly tied funds to digital and climate objectives. The **2021 State of the Union** (von der Leyen) similarly framed the moment as a 'new European era,' but structural integration (e.g., capital markets union, fiscal federalism) saw little progress. Critics noted the risk of **uneven implementation** across member states.
Samenvatting verdict
Lagarde’s claim reflects *aspirational* EU policy directions post-pandemic (e.g., digital/green transitions), but the degree of 'integration' and implementation progress in 2021 was *overstated* or premature.