The agreement, which includes the first spending cuts in the bloc's history, still requires parliamentary approval. But it ends months of infighting over the package and hands the recession-hit 27-nation area a proper budget to finance everything from infrastructure and farming subsidies to development aid and employment measures.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the agreement today after talks with lawmakers and officials representing the EU member states. European Parliament President Martin Schulz called the deal "acceptable" and said he's "optimistic" that a majority of lawmakers will back it at a vote next week.
The 2014-2020 budget includes the bloc's first ever spending cuts, as many of the bloc's countries are in recession and struggling to reduce their own national debt.
"This is a good deal for Europe, this is a good deal for European citizens, this is a good deal for the European economy," Barroso said. "This is the growth fund for Europe," he added, noting that it allows for more money to be spent quicker on investment and other projects boosting employment.
The EU countries have been trying since last fall to cobble the budget together. Some countries wanted to increase or maintain spending levels while others firmly insisted it made no sense to increase the budget while individual governments were imposing tough austerity policies at home.