No deal in sight for EU budget: France's Hollande

PARIS (AFP) - French President Francois Hollande warned Sunday that the prospects were slim of clinching a deal this week on the European Union's next seven-year budget.

"The negotiations are very difficult. ... We are doing all we can so that we can reach an accord ... but the conditions are, at this moment, not yet in place," he told reporters.

He made the comment as EU leaders prepare to meet in Brussels on Thursday and Friday for a second attempt at finding a deal on the 27-nation bloc's trillion-euro budget for 2014-20.

Hollande's warning came a day after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the budget negotiations would be "very difficult" and that it may take time to reach a deal.

In November, EU President Herman Van Rompuy proposed a budget of 973 billion euros (S$1.6 trillion), or just over one per cent of EU gross domestic product.

But European leaders were unable to resolve differences about demands for cuts in the budget by some member states and over how spending cuts should be split across different European policies.

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.