Mario Draghi‘s report on how to boost the competitiveness of the European Union has already become almost a sacred text in Brussels. Everyone is embracing it, and while everyone interprets it as they see fit, there seems to be a consensus that a major investment needs to be made immediately to prevent the bloc falling further and further behind the States United States and China. Now, the former president of the European Central Bank (ECB) calculates that to deploy his plan around 800,000 million euros are needed, which has put on the political table the big question that divides the member states every two to three of the EU: and, all this, by whom and how should it be financed?