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Activities of Romana TOMC related to 2022/2046(INI)

Shadow opinions (1)

POSITION IN THE FORM OF AMENDMENTS on upscaling the 2021-2027 multiannual financial framework: a resilient EU budget fit for new challenges
2022/10/14
Committee: EMPL
Dossiers: 2022/2046(INI)
Documents: PDF(202 KB) DOC(86 KB)
Authors: [{'name': 'Dragoş PÎSLARU - President', 'mepid': None}]

Amendments (9)

Amendment 4 #
Draft report
Recital D
D. whereas, in times of increasing inflation, rapid increases in food and energy prices across the Union affect the most vulnerable, citizens rightly expect the EU budget to respond effectively to evolving needs and to support them in crises;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG
Amendment 7 #
Draft report
Recital E
E. whereas the combined effect of multiple crises and low MFF ceilings has given rise to a ‘galaxy’ of ad hoc instruments beyond the EU budget, as well as greater use of external assigned revenue not subject to the budgetary procedure, most notably in the case of NextGenerationEU (NGEU); whereas NGEU with the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) ensured an economically and socially sustainable, just, inclusive and non-discriminatory recovery; whereas, as one arm of the budgetary authority, Parliament should play a full role in this new budgetary environment in order to ensure democratic accountability and transparency; whereas the European instrument for temporary support to mitigate unemployment risks in an emergency (SURE) adopted by the Commission was a success;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG
Amendment 8 #
Draft report
Recital G a (new)
Ga. whereas the European Pillar of Social Rights (EPSR) Action Plan set a target for the Union to reduce the number of people at risk of poverty or social exclusion by at least 15 million, including at least 5 million children, and adopted a series of proposals in order to reach that goal by 2030;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG
Amendment 10 #
Draft report
Paragraph 1
1. Underlines the central role that the EU budget plays in delivering on the Union’s political priorities, including making a success of the green and digital transitions, fostering an inclusive and social recovery, promoting growth, strategic autonomy and energy independence, providing support for small and medium-sized enterprises, fostering sustainable development that leaves no one behind and ensures cohesion and upward convergence, ensuring a more robust European Health Union in the aftermath of the COVID-19 crisis, promoting the rule of law, EU values and fundamental rights, contributing to greater opportunities for all, and ensuring a stronger Union for its people and in the world; points out that the European Social Fund Plus (ESF+) is the key driver for strengthening the social dimension of the Union and the main instrument for investing in people, promoting high employment levels, building social protection and developing a skilled and resilient workforce ready for the transition to a green and digital economy in line with the principles of the European Pillar of Social Rights;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG
Amendment 15 #
Draft report
Paragraph 3
3. Highlights that, in the short term, large-scale humanitarian aid in Ukraine and financial support to Member States receiving and helping to settle people fleeing the conflict are needed to address the impact of the war against Ukraine; welcomes the efforts made by Member States hosting persons fleeing the war in Ukraine in terms of offering infrastructure, education and work to refugees;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG
Amendment 17 #
Draft report
Paragraph 8
8. Emphasises, therefore, that the 2021-2027 MFF is already being pushed to its limits less than two years after its adoption, a situation aggravated by the unforeseeable events of 2022; points out that it is simply not equipped, in terms of size, structure or rules, to respond to a multitude of crises of this scale, nor to adequately finance new shared EU policy ambitions and the swift implementation of the requisite EU-wide solutions; recalls that ESF+ is expected to contribute to the implementation of the European Pillar of Social Rights Action Plan; is concerned about the very limited margins available under the MFF and insists for the need to enhance spending to speed up the implementation of the EPSR Action Plan;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG
Amendment 27 #
Draft report
Paragraph 17 a (new)
17a. Highlights the demographic situation in the EU with ageing population as a demographic phenomenon which involves a decrease both in fertility and mortality rates and a higher life expectancy; welcomes the European Care Strategy and calls for its support within the MFF; insists on the need to invest in social infrastructures to address the demographic challenge; stresses the lack of policy responses to the impact of demographic change;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG
Amendment 28 #
Draft report
Paragraph 19
19. Regrets that, contrary to Parliament’s position, it was decided that the costs of EURI borrowing and the repayment of debt be included as a budget line under Heading 2b, alongside flagship programmes such as Erasmus+, EU4Health, and Citizens, Equality, Rights and Values; stresses that interest costs and debt repayment depend on market developments, are not discretionary spending, do not follow the logic of caps on spending and should never compete with programmes under the same ceiling; recalls that any activation of the Emergency Support Instrument also depends on the availability of an unallocated margin under the ceiling of this heading; insists, therefore, that the status quo presents significant risks to programme spending and that the repayment line be removed from Heading 2b and counted over and above the MFF ceilings; stresses the importance of European Year of Skills 2023 with concrete actions and policies to further develop employment and entrepreneurship measures and supported by adequate funding within the MFF;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG
Amendment 45 #
Draft report
Paragraph 28
28. Underlines that the temporary and short-term flexibility introduced into cohesion policy funds through the series of Cohesion’s Action for Refugees in Europe (CARE) proposals helped Member States to deal quickly with the impact of the war against Ukraine, following on from the model of the Coronavirus Response Investment Initiatives, CRII and CRII+, which enabled EU action at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic; calls for a temporary European social resilience package coordinating a set of measures and means to strengthen social welfare and social protection systems in the EU, including the continuation and refinancing of SURE as long as the socio- economic consequences of the war continue to have a negative impact on the labour market;
2022/09/28
Committee: EMPLBUDG