The European Union’s leaders endorsed “Buy European” policies protecting strategic sectors during their Belgian summit. The meeting addressed restoring European competitiveness through coordinated industrial protection measures against global threats.
The policy could mandate government prioritization of locally manufactured goods in public contracts, representing significant EU economic thinking evolution. Later this month, an Industrial Accelerator Act will establish European content targets for strategic products.
Von der Leyen acknowledged walking a fine line between necessary protection and maintaining international trade obligations. Her emphasis on robust economic analysis and compliance aims to balance strategic autonomy with beneficial global relationships.
The summit revealed Franco-German cooperation despite differences, with Macron and Merz arriving jointly. While sharing urgency about European action, they diverge on preference scope and trade approaches, particularly regarding South American agreements.
Former Prime Minister Draghi’s assessment that Europe must evolve from confederation to federation influenced discussions. He argued individual member state veto power creates vulnerabilities, allowing competitors to exploit divisions.