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- Final act published in Official Journal 2014/09/05
- Follow-up document 2014/06/26
- Follow-up document 2014/06/26
- Follow-up document 2014/06/26
- Results of vote in Parliament 2014/04/03
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading 2014/04/03
- End of procedure in Parliament 2014/04/03
- Debate in Parliament 2014/04/02
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading 2014/03/24
- Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading 2014/03/18
- Document attached to the procedure 2014/02/28
- Document attached to the procedure 2014/02/28
- Amendments tabled in committee 2014/02/27
- Committee opinion 2014/02/24
- Committee opinion 2014/02/20
Progress: Procedure completed
Lead committee dossier:
Subjects
Events
PURPOSE: to grant discharge to the European Commission on the implementation of the general budget for the Union for 2012.
NON-LEGISLATIVE ACT: Decision 2014/544/EU, Euratom of the European Parliament on discharge in respect of the implementation of the European Union’s General Budget, section III – Commission and executive agencies, for the financial year 2012.
CONTENT: with the present decision, the European Parliament granted discharge to the Commission in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012.
The parallel decision 2014/551/EU, Euratom approves the closure of the accounts for the financial year in question.
In its resolution annexed to the discharge decision, the European Parliament welcomed the fact that the annual accounts of the Union for the financial year 2012 present fairly, and in all material respects, the position of the Union as at 31 December 2012, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the then completed year.
Parliament, however, found that the error rate of the 2012 budget had increased for the third consecutive time and that significant gaps have emerged in agriculture, involving the application of financial corrections (although the Commission had undertaken to strengthen controls in this area and had presented a communication to strengthen the corrections.
At the same time, Parliament considered that priority actions are needed to improve the implementation of the budget in the following areas:
Agricultural Policy : strengthening the control of direct payments as regards in particular the eligibility criteria of permanent pasture areas; Rural development, environment, fisheries and health : improving the respect of the eligibility requirements, in particular those concerning agri-environment commitments, special requirements for investment projects and public procurement rules. Structural changes are called for leading to long-term solutions such as a permanent knowledge-sharing platform among managing authorities and paying agencies across the Union so that EAFRD specific bodies; Regional policy, energy and transport : improved "first-level checks" on expenditure, with a focus on the situation in Greece; Employment and Social Affairs : enhancing the policy to reduce youth unemployment by ensuring full transparency of aid already granted in this area; External Relations and Enlargement : improved control of EuropeAid's ex ante checks as well as the number of cases OLAF started investigating in relation to EuropeAid/DG DEVCO managed projects.
Parliament also deplored the recurrent shortages of payment appropriations have been the main cause of the unprecedentedly high level of RALs especially in the last years of the 2007-2013 MFF. It also expressed concern over the fact that the Commission's outstanding budgetary commitments for which payments and/or decommitments have not yet been made increased reached EUR 217 billion . The Commission is urged to prepare and publish a ‘long-range cash flow forecast’, projecting future payment requirements to ensure that necessary payments can be met from approved annual budgets.
Parliament also makes a series of other observations in a resolution annexed to the discharge decision. For further details concerning these observations, please refer to the summary of the opinion dated 3 April 2014.
It should also be noted that with Decisions 2014/545/EU, Euratom, 2014/546/EU, Euratom; 2013/547/EU, Euratom, 2014/548/EU, Euratom, 2014/549/EU, Euratom, and 2014/550/EU, Euratom, the European Parliament also grants discharge to the directors of the executive agencies “Education, Audiovisual and Culture”, “SME” (former Competitiveness and Innovation”), “Consumers, Health and Food”, “Innovation and Networks” (former “Trans-European Networks For Transport”), “European Research Council” and, lastly, the executive Agency for “Research” in respect of the implementation of their respective budgets for the financial year 2012.
The Commission presents its fourth report on the evaluation of the Union's finances based on the results achieved.
This report follows up on requests made by the Discharge Authority, most recently in its 2012 discharge resolution and in its Resolution of 26 February 20141, on its content and structure.
Structure of the report and objectives : in general, the Commission states that progress towards the Europe 2020 targets have been mixed. Although it is not possible to single out what has been the exact contribution of each of the financial programmes in achieving Europe 2020 targets and although the Europe 2020 strategy had not been adopted when the MFF 2007-2013 programmes were designed, this report provides available performance information on how the financial programmes have contributed to Europe 2020.
2013 is the last year of the MFF 2007-2013 period, but it is still too early fully to measure the programmes' results and impacts. This is because the final and ex-post evaluations addressing these issues are planned in the period 2014-2016. Nevertheless, data is available on indicators measuring the extent to which the implementation of the programmes is on track and a number of evaluations have been finalised giving performance feedback.
The report examines the results achieved for the main financial programmes. It is accompanied by two Commission Staff Working Documents which aim: (i) to provide an analysis and a description of the monitoring, reporting and evaluation frameworks for the financial programmes in 2014-2020; (ii) to take stock of the progress made to date on the Action Plan for the Development of the Article 318 Evaluation Report, attached to last year's Report.
Operational content of the report : the report is structured according to budget headings. For those budget headings related to the internal policies of the EU, it gives:
the main financial programmes and their link to Europe 2020; an assessment of available performance results; an account of operational aspects of performance.
For the EU external policies , the report focuses on the main achievements of the financial programmes related to external policy goals.
In line with the guidance given by the Discharge Authority this Report provides an overview, and so does not give an exhaustive and detailed account of the annual progress in achieving objectives for each of the MFF 2007-2013 financial programmes. Such detailed information, including summaries of 2013 evaluations, is available in the Annual Activity Reports of the Commission departments.
Main conclusions : the Commission is generally on track in implementing the different programmes, with occasional examples of lack of progress compared to set milestones and indicators. Much of the information and data at this stage concerns outputs and actions being taken rather than results and impacts on programme objectives, but first indications of overall performance confirm expectations based on the design of the programmes and the progress achieved in their implementation.
It is difficult to measure the extent to which progress towards overall strategic policy objectives is a direct and exclusive result of actions financed by the spending programmes, while confirmation is provided of the added value of common objectives and co-ordinated action by the EU , contributing to increased efficiency and effectiveness.
The economic downturn has clearly slowed down progress in achieving EU headline targets on important aims such as the reduction in the number of people at risk of poverty and social exclusion. In response to the crisis, the Commission has undertaken various measures to speed up the implementation and align EU financing with the objectives of the Europe 2020 strategy.
It is clear that despite this fact the EU spending programmes alone have not been able to reverse the economic slowdown . This report provides many examples of financial programmes reducing the negative effects of the crisis for companies and Member States. For example, different financial facilities enabled SMEs and innovative firms to continue to invest for the future. Also in many Member States support from European Structural Funds has been the key instrument to support active labour market policies.
In a similar vein whilst EU funding has contributed important strategic policy objectives, large scale funding under the European Energy Programme for Recovery of gas and electricity interconnections has only started to contribute to easing the wide-ranging energy security issue and to consolidate the internal market in energy, while far more needs to be done to further improve interconnections with the more remote and/or less well connected parts of the single market .
The report states that:
the Commission has used the input from all available forms of assessment, such as evaluations and special reports from the Court of Auditors, to adapt the implementation of programmes and preparation of successor programmes; the Commission has called for more focus on effectiveness and efficiency and for inclusion of better indicators and systems to track evidence of performance.
The report concludes that the monitoring, reporting and evaluation framework for the MFF 2014-2020 based on the legislation adopted by Parliament and Council for the new financial programmes provides what has broadly been agreed as a sound foundation for future reporting on results and impacts.
Reporting on 2007-2013 programmes will continue well into the next financial period.
The European Parliament adopted by 488 votes to 121, with 10 abstentions, a decision to grant discharge to the Commission in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, as well to the Directors of the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency, the Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, the Consumers, Health and Food Executive Agency, the Research Executive Agency, the Innovation and Networks Executive Agency, on the implementation of their respective budgets for the financial year 2012.
The European Parliament also approved the closure of the accounts of the general budget of the European Union for 2012.
In its resolution accompanying the granting of the discharge, adopted by 504 votes to 96, with 11 abstentions, Parliament recalled that for the 19th consecutive year, the Court of Auditors was unable to grant a positive statement of assurance regarding the legality and regularity of the payments underlying the 2012 accounts.
Agriculture and regional policy: deficiencies in the Commission’s and Member States’ management: noting the repeated error concentration in a few Member States, Parliament called on the Commission to assume greater and more substantial responsibility for safeguarding the Union budget against financial losses and urged all relevant actors involved in Union decision-making to simplify further, notably by drafting eligibility rules that are simple and verifiable, cutting red tape and devising appropriate and effective controls.
Observing that in the 2012 financial year the error rate rose for the third time in succession, Parliament recalled that the rapporteur and the shadow rapporteurs for the discharge to the Commission for the financial year 2012 called for more stringent financial corrections to be imposed on those Member States whose management and monitoring systems display persistent and systematic weaknesses. Although the Commission was committed to strengthening controls in this area and had submitted a Communication to strengthen financial corrections, Parliament stressed that the application of net financial corrections in the field of agriculture does not yet constitute the anticipated progress.
Commission’s Reservations, reasons for binding commitments: revealing that 8 Member States (out of 28) are responsible for 90% of the financial corrections in the area of shared management, the plenary acknowledged, as the Commission has frequently indicated, that around 80% of the funds are being spend under shared management. Parliament recalled, nevertheless, that Article 317 TFEU stipulates that the Commission bears the ultimate responsibility for the implementation of the budget but that it expects full cooperation from Member States, however, in ensuring that they fully apply the rules on sound financial management and controls.
In this context, Parliament underlined that it only issues reservation in areas for which it has not received adequate assurance from the Commission and/or the Court of Auditors to refute its concerns . It deems it a priority that the Commission proves to Parliament in the case of reservations in which way convincing remedial measures have been taken to overcome the latter's concerns. It regarded reservations as a new and effective budgetary control instrument , being a commitment by Parliament to monitor closely the measures taken by the Commission and Member States to eliminate these problems, so as to justify in the eyes of the public in particular the decision to grant discharge.
Parliament endorsed reservations on two major EU policies and underlined that:
- as regards agriculture , the Commission observed that the error rate in the field of rural development, environment, fisheries and health is 7.9 %. It regretted that due to the delay between payment claims, payments, controls and reported statistics, no significant impact on reducing the error rate can be expected before 2014 at the earliest, although an action plan was adopted in 2012. Parliament calls on the Commission to strengthen its controls, in particular for errors detected in France and Portugal (these countries have been cited as problematic by the Court of Auditors since 2006);
- as regards regional policy , some audit authorities of Member States are not carrying out their audits with the requisite thoroughness and that it is not sufficiently apparent whether and in what respect they are permanently improving their supervisory and control systems. In this respect, the Commission should conduct more audits of the final beneficiaries and Member States who repeatedly show signs of management weakness.
Measures to be taken : in a series of general observations, Parliament called for the introduction of priority actions dealing with the following:
to remedy shortcomings in the Land Parcel Identification System (LPIS), for action plans to be implemented promptly, which would include proportional net financial corrections as part of the conformity clearance procedure where deadlines set in the action plans are not met, and adversarial procedures to be completed in general in two years; the DGs concerned should build up a new and reinforced audit strategy to counter weaknesses found in some Member States; intensification of quality checks on Member-States audit and control reports; application of progressively increasing payment reductions and administrative sanctions where eligibility criteria have not been respected by the final beneficiary receiving direct payments or rural development support and recurrent LPIS shortcomings; suspension mechanism to be used as an ex ante instrument for protection of the Union budget; for France and Portugal, comprehensive action plans should be established in the field of agriculture in among other the updating of their LPIS systems; limit the option of replacing projects affected by error with new projects; making better use of RAL and limiting the period covered by pre-financing; the Commission should reach binding bilateral agreements with Member States which have attracted particular attention, along the lines of the European Semester.
Parliament called for the above commitments to be sent, by the newly elected President of Parliament, to the President of the Commission calling for binding commitments for the delivery of the above following the 2014 European Parliament elections.
Newly elected Parliament: Parliament called for the new assembly that is elected to (i) forward the above list of actions to the President of the Commission and to obtain a commitment that they will be delivered following the 2014 Parliament elections; (ii) include the above commitments in the written procedure at the hearings of the designated members of the new Commission; (iii) demand appropriate pledges in order to improve protection of the Union budget; (iv) ensure, through the relevant committees, that the respective Commissioners commit themselves formally, in the written procedure prior to the hearings, to take remedial action within the defined timeframe in time for the 2013 discharge procedure; (v) probe all legal means of achieving further legislative improvements, if appropriate, in the context of the mid-term review of the Multiannual Financial Framework.
I. Court of Auditors’ Statement of assurance :
Reliability of the accounts – favourable opinion : Parliament welcomed the fact that the annual accounts of the Union for the financial year 2012 present fairly, and in all material respects, the position of the Union as at 31 December 2012 and the results of its operations, its cash flows and the changes in net assets for the then completed year.
Legality and regularity of revenue – adverse opinion : Parliament noted with concern that all areas of operational expenditure contributed to this increase, with the rural development, environment, fisheries and health remaining the most errorprone policy group with an estimated error rate of 7.9%. Parliament deeply regretted that payments remain materially affected by error. It reminded the Commission that Parliament has a zero-tolerance approach to errors.
Although Parliament noted that the financial corrections reported as implemented in 2012 were more than three times the figure for 2011, it considered that these measures have still had too little impact on the Union budget . It asked the Commission to provide Parliament and the Council with precise amounts and the use made thereof in this regard in the next communication on the protection of the Union budget for the financial year 2013.
RAL : Parliament stressed that the recurrent shortages of payment appropriations have been the main cause of the unprecedentedly high level of RALs especially in the last years of the 2007-2013 MFF. It noted with deep concern that the Commission is finding it increasingly difficult to meet all requests for payments in the year within the budget appropriations for payment and that the cumulative total of commitment appropriations available for payments over the period 2007-2013 has exceeded the cumulative total of payment appropriations available over the same period by EUR 114 billon. It also expressed concern over the fact that the Commission's outstanding budgetary commitments for which payments and/or decommitments have not yet been made increased by EUR 10 billion to EUR 217 billion . The Commission is urged to prepare and publish a ‘long-range cash flow forecast’, projecting future payment requirements to ensure that necessary payments can be met from approved annual budgets.
Shared management : once again, Parliament requested the Member States to urgently reinforce the primary controls to address this unacceptably high level of mismanagement. It called on the Commission to shield the Union budget from the resulting risk of irregular payment by applying financial corrections in the event that such weaknesses in Member States' management and control systems are found and on the Member States and the Commission to urgently reinforce first-level checks to address this unacceptably high level of mismanagement.
Council discharge recommendations: Parliament called for the Council to adopt a more critical position on the discharge and the ultimate use made of Union tax revenue in the Member States. It notes in this connection the critical stance taken by Sweden, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands on the discharge for 2012. It hopes that during their respective Presidencies, they will provide the necessary information, as requested by Parliament, on the execution of the Council's budget, preventing a further refusal by Parliament to grant discharge.
II. Budget implementation by policy : Parliament then returned point by point to the implementation of the budget and highlighted the following:
Revenue : Parliament expressed its concern about the weaknesses of the Value Added Tax (VAT) systems of the Member States (findings of a study estimated losses of VAT revenue in 2011 due to infringements or failure to collect the tax at EUR 193 billion for public finances in the Member States) and called for improvements in certain Member States, such as Belgium, Finland and Poland.
Agriculture : Parliament pointed out that the most frequent accuracy errors relate to overstated area declarations and administrative errors, and that the bigger accuracy errors relate mostly to excessive payments for permanent grassland. It was deeply concerned about the fact that the critical observations made in the annual report of the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 and the systematic weaknesses detected by the latter have already been reported by the Court of Auditors in its previous reports, and in particular, as regards the eligibility of permanent pasture, since 2007. It called on the Commission and the Court of Auditors, in the context of the adversarial procedure, to reach agreement on the eligibility criteria for permanent pasture .
Rural development, environment, fisheries and health : Parliament pointed out that, as in 2011, the major component (65%) of the most likely error rate reported by the Court of Auditors concerns non-area-related measures, and stressed that the reason for most quantifiable errors was that the beneficiaries did not respect the eligibility requirements, in particular those concerning agri-environment commitments, special requirements for investment projects and public procurement rules. It called on the Commission to continue to provide guidance and assistance to Member States by means of best practice, through systematic interruptions of payments, financial corrections according to the severity of the error and also, in addition, by drawing up short term and ad hoc action plans. It also asked for structural changes leading to long-term solutions such as a permanent knowledge-sharing platform among managing authorities and paying agencies across the Union so that EAFRD specific bodies can learn by examples and best practices.
Regional policy, energy and transport : Parliament stressed that the findings of the Court of Auditors’ audit indicate weaknesses in the ‘first-level checks’ on expenditure. It considered it unacceptable that, for years, errors of the same kind continue to be identified, often in the same Member States. It acknowledged that suspension and interruptions of payments by the Commission ensures that corrective actions are carried out in cases where deficiencies were identified and called on the Commission to step up monitoring of national and regional management and control systems in the light of this finding. It called on the newly elected Parliament to establish action to remedy the weaknesses detected in the fields of agriculture and regional policy as urgent tasks in the new European Commission's work programme. It also raised the issue of the weaknesses in the fields of agricultural and regional policy indicated here at the hearings of the designated members of the new Commission and to demand appropriate pledges in order to improve protection of the Union budget.
The plenary raised the problem of European funding for investment which would lead to job losses in those same firms in another region of the EU. It urged the Commission to launch an investigation into the scale of such improper use of EU funding in connection with projects involving less than EUR 50 million. It also looked to the Commission to make sure that EU funding which is disbursed in contravention of the rules is paid back.
A follow-up is needed as regards the weaknesses identified in Greece.
Employment and social affairs : Parliament noted that, as in previous years, the Court of Auditors considers that for 67% of the transactions affected by error sufficient information was available for the Member State authorities to have detected and corrected at least one or more of the errors prior to certifying the expenditure to the Commission. It observed furthermore that the main source of error is payment of ineligible costs and breaches of public procurement rules. It called for a policy to reduce youth unemployment which possesses Union added value . In this regard, it called for an ‘honest’ European subsidy policy which focuses far more on transfers of know-how from Member States with low youth unemployment rates to Member States where those rates are high, but without further arousing false expectations and without further making promises on matters for which the Union cannot assume primary responsibility. Parliament is critical of the fact that the Commission has failed to act on repeated calls from Parliament to indicate the sums of Union funding, in both absolute and proportional terms, which have been used to improve training schemes for the 2007-2013 funding period.
External relations, aid and enlargement : Parliament regretted that shortcomings persist in EuropeAid's ex ante checks and in the supervisory and control system and that, according to the findings of the Court of Auditors, the Commission’s 2011 reorganisation continues adversely to affect the activity of its Internal Audit Capacity. It also regretted that the supervisory and control systems of EuropeAid are only partially effective, which means that they fail to detect and correct material errors. It supported the Commission's continuing efforts to shift from an input-based to a performance- and impact-oriented approach and urged the adoption of specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and timed benchmarks for all programmes in Heading 4 of the Union budget. It noted with concern that the number of cases OLAF started investigating in relation to EuropeAid/DG DEVCO managed projects has increased from 33 (in 2011) to 45 in 2012.
Research and other internal policies : Parliament considered it incomprehensible that the Court of Auditors still finds a significant error rate in the cost statements drawn up by independent auditors. It considered, therefore, that the Commission and Member States should supply auditors with all the necessary background material and training material to facilitate correct auditing of cost statements.
OLAF : Parliament observed that the President of the Commission still has not accounted to Parliament in plenary for the loss of office of Health Commissioner John Dalli on 16 October 2012. It insisted on the necessity of respecting the presumption of innocence and noted that the serious accusations of corruption levelled at the Commissioner by the tobacco industry, which he has always rejected, remain unproven to this day.
Lastly, it recalled that in order to ensure the sound financial management of Union funds, the Commission administers the Central Exclusion Database – a database of entities excluded from Union funding for reasons such as insolvency, final court judgments for fraud, corruption, decisions of a contracting authority for grave professional misconduct and conflict of interest. It regretted that this central database is not accessible to the public or to the Members of Parliament and called on the Commission to make the Central Exclusion Database public.
The Committee on Budgetary Control adopted the report by Markus PIEPER (EPP, DE) in which it recommended the European Parliament to grant the Commission discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012 as well as to the Directors of the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency, the Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, the Consumers, Health and Food Executive Agency, the Research Executive Agency, the Innovation and
Networks Executive Agency, on the implementation of their respective budgets for the financial year 2012
The Commission also recommends that the European Parliament gives closure to the accounts of the general budget of the European Union for 2012.
Strengthen the supervisory role of the Commission : recalling that for the 19th time in succession, the Court of Auditors was unable to grant a positive statement of assurance regarding the legality and regularity of the payments underlying the 2012 accounts, Members called on the Co mmission to assume greater and more substantial responsibility for safeguarding the Union budget against financial losses and called furthermore for a better coordination of public procurement rules at the level of all stakeholders and a simplification and harmonisation of rules and financial corrections.
Observing that in the 2012 financial year the error rate rose for the third time in succession, Members recalled that the rapporteur and the shadow rapporteurs for the discharge to the Commission for the financial year 2012 called for more stringent financial corrections to be imposed on those Member States whose management and monitoring systems display persistent and systematic weaknesses. Although the Commission was committed to strengthening controls in this area and had submitted a Communication to strengthen financial corrections, Members noted that it awaits the delegated act laying down detailed rules for the criteria for the assessment of the functioning of management and control systems, for establishing the level of financial corrections to be applied and for applying flat-rate corrections.
Parliamentary reserve on agricultural and cohesion : revealing that 8 Members States (out of 28) are responsible for 90% of the financial corrections in the area of shared management, Members called on the Commission, in light of repeated error concentration in a few Member States, to assume greater and more substantial responsibility for safeguarding the Union budget against financial losses.
In this context, Members underlined that Parliament only issues reservation in areas for which it has not received adequate assurance from the Commission and/or the Court of Auditors to refute its concerns , deems it a priority that the Commission proves to Parliament in the case of reservations in which way convincing remedial measures have been taken to overcome the latter's concerns. They regarded reservations as a new and effective budgetary control instrument , being a commitment by Parliament to monitor closely the measures taken by the Commission and Member States to eliminate these problems, so as to justify in the eyes of the public in particular the decision to grant discharge.
Members endorsed reservations on two major EU policies:
- as regards agriculture , the Commission should strengthen its controls in particular as regards the errors in the Land Parcel Identification System (LPIS) in France and Portugal since 2006. Members endorsed the reservations issued by the Director-General of DG AGRI with regard to serious deficiencies in the direct payment systems in Bulgaria, France and Portugal;
- as regards regional policy , some audit authorities of Member States are not carrying out their audits with the requisite thoroughness and that it is not sufficiently apparent whether and in what respect they are permanently improving their supervisory and control systems. In this respect, the Commission should conduct more audits of the final beneficiaries and Member States who repeatedly show signs of management weakness.
Measures to be taken : in a series of general observations, Members call for the introduction of priority actions dealing with the following:
the DGs concerned should build up a new and reinforced audit strategy to counter weaknesses found in some Member States; intensification of quality checks on Member-States audit and control reports; application of progressively increasing payment reductions and administrative sanctions where eligibility criteria have not been respected by the final beneficiary receiving direct payments or rural development support and recurrent LPIS shortcomings; suspension mechanism to be used as an ex ante instrument for protection of the Union budget; for France and Portugal, comprehensive action plans should be established in the field of agriculture in among other the updating of their LPIS systems; limit the option of replacing projects affected by error with new projects; making better use of RAL and limiting the period covered by pre-financing; the Commission should reach binding bilateral agreements with Member States which have attracted particular attention , along the lines of the European Semester.
Members called for the above commitments to be sent, by the newly elected President of Parliament, to the President of the Commission calling for binding commitments for the delivery of the above following the 2014 European parliament elections.
I. Court of Auditors’ Statement of assurance :
Reliability of the accounts – favourable opinion : Members welcomed the fact that the annual accounts of the Union for the financial year 2012 present fairly, and in all material respects, the position of the Union as at 31 December 2012 and the results of its operations, its cash flows and the changes in net assets for the then completed year. Legality and regularity of revenue – adverse opinion : Members noted with concern that all areas of operational expenditure contributed to this increase, with the rural development, environment, fisheries and health remaining the most errorprone policy group with an estimated error rate of 7.9%. Members deeply regretted that payments remain materially affected by error. They reminded the Commission that Parliament has a zero-tolerance approach to errors.
Although Members noted that the financial corrections reported as implemented in 2012 were more than three times the figure for 2011, they considered that these measures have still had too little impact on the Union budget . They asked the Commission to provide Parliament and the Council with precise amounts and the use made thereof in this regard in the next communication on the protection of the Union budget for the financial year 2013.
RAL : Members stressed that the recurrent shortages of payment appropriations have been the main cause of the unprecedentedly high level of RALs especially in the last years of the 2007-2013 MFF. They noted with deep concern that the Commission is finding it increasingly difficult to meet all requests for payments in the year within the budget appropriations for payment and that the cumulative total of commitment appropriations available for payments over the period 2007-2013 has exceeded the cumulative total of payment appropriations available over the same period by EUR 114 billon. They also expressed concern over the fact that the Commission's outstanding budgetary commitments for which payments and/or decommitments have not yet been made increased by EUR 10 billion to EUR 217 billion . The Commission is urged to prepare and publish a ‘long-range cash flow forecast’, projecting future payment requirements to ensure that necessary payments can be met from approved annual budgets.
Shared management : once again, Members requested the Member States to urgently reinforce the primary controls to address this unacceptably high level of mismanagement. They called on the Commission to shield the Union budget from the resulting risk of irregular payment by applying financial corrections in the event that such weaknesses in Member States' management and control systems are found and n the Member States and the Commission to urgently reinforce first-level checks to address this unacceptably high level of mismanagement.
II. Budget implementation by policy : Members then return point by point to the implementation of the budget and highlight the following:
Revenue : Members expressed its concern about the weaknesses of the Value Added Tax (VAT) systems of the Member States (findings of a study estimated losses of VAT revenue in 2011 due to infringements or failure to collect the tax at EUR 193 billion for public finances in the Member States) and called for improvements in certain Member States, such as Belgium, Finland and Poland.
Agriculture : Members pointed out that the most frequent accuracy errors relate to overstated area declarations and administrative errors, and that the bigger accuracy errors relate mostly to excessive payments for permanent grassland. Members were deeply concerned about the fact that the critical observations made in the annual report of the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 and the systematic weaknesses detected by the latter have already been reported by the Court of Auditors in its previous reports, and in particular, as regards the eligibility of permanent pasture, since 2007. They called on the Commission and the Court of Auditors, in the context of the adversarial procedure, to reach agreement on the eligibility criteria for permanent pasture .
Rural development, environment, fisheries and health : Members pointed out that, as in 2011, the major component (65%) of the most likely error rate reported by the Court of Auditors concerns non-area-related measures, and stressed that the reason for most quantifiable errors was that the beneficiaries did not respect the eligibility requirements, in particular those concerning agri-environment commitments, special requirements for investment projects and public procurement rules. They called on the Commission to continue to provide guidance and assistance to Member States by means of best practice, through systematic interruptions of payments, financial corrections according to the severity of the error and also, in addition, by drawing up short term and ad hoc action plans. They also asked for structural changes leading to long-term solutions such as a permanent knowledge-sharing platform among managing authorities and paying agencies across the Union so that EAFRD specific bodies can learn by examples and best practices.
Regional policy, energy and transport : Members stressed that the findings of the Court of Auditors’ audit indicate weaknesses in the ‘first-level checks’ on expenditure. They considered it unacceptable that, for years, errors of the same kind continue to be identified, often in the same Member States. They acknowledged that suspension and interruptions of payments by the Commission ensures that corrective actions are carried out in cases where deficiencies were identified and called on the Commission to step up monitoring of national and regional management and control systems in the light of this finding. They called on the newly elected Parliament to establish action to remedy the weaknesses detected in the fields of agriculture and regional policy as urgent tasks in the new European Commission's work programme. They also raised the issue of the weaknesses in the fields of agricultural and regional policy indicated here at the hearings of the designated members of the new Commission and to demand appropriate pledges in order to improve protection of the Union budget.
A follow-up is needed as regards the weaknesses identified in Greece.
Employment and social affairs : Members noted that, as in previous years, the Court of Auditors considers that for 67% of the transactions affected by error sufficient information was available for the Member State authorities to have detected and corrected at least one or more of the errors prior to certifying the expenditure to the Commission. They observed furthermore that the main source of error is payment of ineligible costs and breaches of public procurement rules. They called for a policy to reduce youth unemployment which possesses Union added value . In this regard, they called for an ‘honest’ European subsidy policy which focuses far more on transfers of know-how from Member States with low youth unemployment rates to Member States where those rates are high, but without further arousing false expectations and without further making promises on matters for which the Union cannot assume primary responsibility. Members are critical of the fact that the Commission has failed to act on repeated calls from Parliament to indicate the sums of Union funding, in both absolute and proportional terms, which have been used to improve training schemes for the 2007-2013 funding period.
External relations, aid and enlargement : Members regretted that shortcomings persist in EuropeAid's ex ante checks and in the supervisory and control system and that, according to the findings of the Court of Auditors, the Commission’s 2011 reorganisation continues adversely to affect the activity of its Internal Audit Capacity. They also regretted that the supervisory and control systems of EuropeAid are only partially effective, which means that they fail to detect and correct material errors. They supported the Commission's continuing efforts to shift from an input-based to a performance- and impact-oriented approach and urged the adoption of specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and timed benchmarks for all programmes in Heading 4 of the Union budget. They noted with concern that the number of cases OLAF started investigating in relation to EuropeAid/DG DEVCO managed projects has increased from 33 (in 2011) to 45 in 2012.
Research and other internal policies : Members considered it incomprehensible that the Court of Auditors still finds a significant error rate in the cost statements drawn up by independent auditors. They considered, therefore, that the Commission and Member States should supply auditors with all the necessary background material and training material to facilitate correct auditing of cost statements.
OLAF : Members observed that the President of the Commission still has not accounted to Parliament in plenary for the loss of office of Health Commissioner John Dalli on 16 October 2012. They insisted on the necessity of respecting the presumption of innocence and noted that the serious accusations of corruption levelled at the Commissioner by the tobacco industry, which he has always rejected, remain unproven to this day.
Lastly, they recalled that in order to ensure the sound financial management of Union funds, the Commission administers the Central Exclusion Database–a database of entities excluded from Union funding for reasons such as insolvency, final court judgments for fraud, corruption, decisions of a contracting authority for grave professional misconduct and conflict of interest. They regretted that this central database is not accessible to the public or to the Members of Parliament and called on the Commission to make the Central Exclusion Database public.
This report is an analysis of the Member States' replies to the European Court of Auditors' annual report for budgetary year 2012.
Court’s audit results : the results showed that for 2012 the consolidated accounts presented the financial position of the Union fairly and that they were free from any material misstatements. However, for expensed payments the Court’s conclusion was that they were materially affected by error and the related control systems examined were partially effective for all expenditure areas except administrative expenditure, which was free from errors.
For the budget as a whole, the most likely error rate had increased from 3.9% in 2011 to 4.8% in 2012 . The Court identified that eligibility errors accounted for a significant proportion of the estimated overall error rate.
It also highlighted that shared management expenditure, which represents 80% of EU expenditure, contributed significantly to the estimated overall error rates and that many of the errors found could have been detected by better first-line controls at the level of the Member States.
Member States’ replies : this report is accompanied by a Staff Working Document (SWD) which comprises the Member States' detailed replies (SWD(2014) 60 final) .
This report analyses the replies provided by Member States under three main thematic headings:
(1) Performance : the Court criticised the existing performance measurement and reporting framework. Member States were therefore requested to reply to questions on performance measurement , evaluation and reporting for cofinanced programmes. Twenty three Member States indicated that they use SMART objectives and RACER indicators. Member States also detailed various aspects of their national performance measurement processes.
If the Member States' positive view is confirmed, it would allow the Commission to improve its global performance measurement and reporting on the basis of Member States’ data.
(2) Eligibility and accuracy errors : in the area of expensed payments, the Court identified recurrent eligibility errors with a financial impact concerning ineligible VAT in cost claims .
In the area of Agriculture it also indicated that there were significant deficiencies related to three Land Parcel Identification Systems (LPIS) audited resulting in eligibility and accuracy errors.
All Member States concerned indicated that they had made efforts to rectify VAT errors and to update and improve LPIS databases. The Court highlighted the positive impact of simplified cost options (SCOs) in the area of Employment and Cohesion and its opinion was shared by a majority of Member States. This is extremely important because the use of SCOs could be a key element in the prevention of errors in programmes under the new MFF.
(3) Improving controls and systems : in shared management the Commission applies the concept of single audit whenever possible, meaning that it may rely on audit and controls performed by national audit authorities, if they are proven to be reliable and if the management and control systems are fully effective.
In its report, the Court referred to the risk of frequently unreliable information provided by the audit authorities .
Ten Member States replied that they had no plans for improvements as they considered their audit authorities to be reliable. Member States all expressed overall satisfaction with the guidance on the treatment of errors provided and the seminars organised by the Commission in 2012 and 2013. The majority of Member States indicated that they were willing to establish effective and proportionate anti-fraud measures.
Although, the Commission acknowledges the advantages of the single audit concept, it has to ensure the reliability of the data reported by the Member States and it therefore performs reviews and audits of the systems of national audit authorities and the national bodies responsible for the implementation of EU programmes.
In line with paragraph 1, Article 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), the Council approved a recommendation on granting the Commission discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012.
Analysis of expenditure :
· revenue for the year amounted to EUR 139 540 541 171.93;
· expenditure disbursed from appropriations amounted to EUR 137 737 768 772.97 ;
· cancelled payment appropriations carried over from year n-1 amounted to EUR 92 099 139.87;
· appropriations for payments carried over to year n+1 amounted to EUR 930 914 134.37;
· the positive budget balance amounted to EUR 1 018 938 932.75;
· cancelled payment appropriations for the financial year amounted to EUR 73 827 261.80;
· of the EUR 1 019 506 414.62 in appropriations for payments carried over to year n, EUR 945 679 152.82 (93%) have been used.
On the basis of the observations made by the Court of Auditors, the Council recommends the European Parliament to give a discharge to the Commission in respect of the implementation of the budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012. However, it considers that the budgetary implementation invokes a series of comments from the Council that should be fully taken into account when granting discharge.
DAS : the Council welcomes the Court's Statement of Assurance (DAS) on the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012, according to which the consolidated accounts of the European Union were, in 2012, free from material error and present fairly, in all material aspects, the financial position of the Union and the results of its operations and its cash flows.
It states that the error rate was at 4.8% for 2012 , thereby payments from the budget continued to be materially affected by error . It is also concerned that supervisory and control systems audited by the Court were only partially effective in ensuring the legality and regularity of transactions.
In general, the Council recalls that better spending and sound financial management of EU funds is of particular importance for the public perception of actions financed from the EU budget. Thus, the Council calls for the full implementation of the recommendations presented by the Court in its annual report.
Management of EU Funds : in the area of shared management, the Council regrets that the error rate still remains above the materiality threshold. Therefore, it calls upon the Commission to further strengthen the control systems and to make them more efficient, to put more emphasis on measures preventing errors, on timely interruption and suspension of payments, to target the most risk prone programmes and to apply financial corrections and recoveries , rigorously in line with the relevant rules, in order to protect the EU budget. The Council takes note of the findings of the Court that for a significant part of transactions affected by error, national authorities had enough information to detect and correct the errors concerned . It calls upon the Commission to provide guidance to Member States with a view to strengthening the efficiency of their administrative and control structures. It calls upon the Commission to fully respect the need to achieve simplification in the management of EU funds and to evaluate the potential additional burden of the measures on Member States before significant changes are introduced.
Simplification of rules : in the Council's view, the simplification of rules is of paramount importance in achieving an unqualified audit opinion. The adoption of the new legislative acts implementing the new multiannual programming period 2014-2020 and the new Financial Regulation is an opportunity to achieve major progress towards simplification and thereby lower the risk of error. Thus, the Council invites the Commission andMember States to take full advantage of this opportunity in the implementation of the new multiannual financial framework and to find the right balance between risks and cost of controls.
Public procurement : the Council regrets that, as in previous years, an important share of the errors is identified by the Court in the area of public procurement, for the EU budget as a whole , and in particular under shared management where national rules also apply. It calls for the simplification of the rules, for the benefit of all relevant actors.
The Council also refers to the need to:
· pursue all available corrective measures and recoveries necessary;
· enhance the value of the annual activity reports ublished by the Commission;
· deal with the problem of outstanding balance of unused commitments (RAL) and to settle them in a timely manner (to this end, Council invites the Commission to prepare and publish a long term cashflow forecast, projecting future payment requirements).
Council also expressed itself on the following aspects of the DAS:
· Reliability of the accounts : the Council welcomes the favourable opinion given by the Court on the reliability of the accounts for the financial year 2012. It notes with satisfaction the Court's statement that the accounts present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Union as at 31December 2012;
· Legality and regularity of the underlying transactions : it regrets that an important share of spending continued to be affected by a material level of error and that the most likely error rate for payments as a whole increased to 4.8% in 2012 . It reiterates its wish to see improvements in financial management systems and lower error rates;
· Control systems : the Council regrets the Court's conclusion that overall the supervisory and control systems were only partially effective in ensuring the legality and regularity of
· payments underlying the accounts, and that payments relating to the other policy groups remained affected by material error. It therefore encourages the Commission to further reinforce supervision and control structures and to further strengthen its cooperation with Member States.
Revenue : the Council notes with satisfaction the Court's conclusion that "Revenue" transactions were free from material error and that overall the related supervisory and control systems were assessed as effective in ensuring the regularity of transactions. It calls on the Commission to continue to improve the estimates of traditional own resources (TOR) and to assist Member States in enhancing appropriate control frameworks in order to collect the maximum amount of TOR due to the Union.
The Council then expressed itself as follows on each budget area :
· Agriculture – direct support : the Council is disappointed that the payments examined by the Court in this policy group were affected by material error and that the most likely error rate estimated by the Court increased to 3.8%. As in previous years, the Council notes that most of the quantifiable errors detected by the Court relate to the accuracy or eligibility of aid payments, in particular the over-declaration of land , which were linked to the shortcomings identified in the Land Parcel Identification System (LPIS), and which, in financial terms, were not significant. The Council, therefore, while noting the need for improvements at national level, calls on the Commission to further engage with Member States to address these shortcomings.
· Rural development, environment, fisheries and health : the Council regrets that the most likely error rate for this policy group was estimated by the Court at 7.9%. The Council takes note that rural development remains a particularly error prone spending area of the EU budget due to the inherent complexity of the programmes, and that, according to the Court, errors were found in all Member States visited. It reiterates its view that the high error risk is partially due to the complexity of the existing rules and eligibility conditions in force. The Council notes that the Court included cross-compliance errors in its estimate of the error rate although the Commission considers that cross-compliance does not constitute an eligibility criterion . The Council invites the Court, in consultation with the Commission, to consider the most appropriate way of reflecting the impact of cross-compliance on the error rate. The Council supports the action plans set up in cooperation with Member States in order to identify and target the root causes of weaknesses relating to the ineffective implementation of procurement rules and to implement remedial actions.
· Regional policy, energy and transport : the Council regrets that the most likely error rate for payments under this policy group increased to 6.8%. The Council reiterates the importance of first-level checks and calls on national managing authorities to ensure more effective verification systems in order to reduce the error rate. It calls on Member States and the Commission to take their respective responsibilities for enhanced guidance and supervision and to provide targeted training and guidelines . As in previous years, failures to comply with public procurement rules and the declaration of ineligible costs were the most common sources of error identified by the Court for this policy group. It also encourages the Commission to focus in particular on preventive measures, in order to better protect the Union budget and awaits with interest the Court's specific audit on public procurement. It stresses the importance of a continued simplification of rules at national and Union level and encourages Member States to implement the Commission's recommendations for eliminating unnecessary complex national rules at programme level.
· Employment and social affairs : in this policy group, the Council notes that that 35% of the transactions were affected by error. Moreover, it underlined that a significant number of errors could have been detected and corrected by Member States themselves. It notes that the main sources of error in this policy group were the declaration of ineligible projects, the reimbursement of ineligible or inaccurately declared costs, and failures to respect national public procurement rules . The Council calls on the Commission and Member States to continue addressing the weaknesses in first-level checks carried out by national managing authorities and intermediate bodies and invites the Commission and Member States to seek possible ways to further simplify and streamline national eligibility criteria.
· External relations, aid and enlargement : the Council regrets the material level of error affecting this policy group (3.3% for 2012). Nevertheless, it welcomes the fact that the frequency of errors has decreased as compared to the previous years. The Council is nevertheless concerned about the Court's conclusion that the supervisory and control systems audited by the Court in the Directorate-General for Development and Cooperation (EuropeAid) were only partially effective in ensuring the legality and regularity of payments. While acknowledging the actions already taken, the Council urges the Commission to take the necessary measures to correct the weaknesses identified in its control mechanism, namely in relation to the ex-ante checks, the clearing procedure, the management of documentation and contract awarding procedures , and the quality checks carried out by external auditors.
· Research and other internal policies : the Council regrets that payments examined by the Court under this policy group were again affected by material error (3.9%). It notes that the main sources of error were the inclusion of ineligible costs, the lack of evidence of expenditure actually incurred , and the use of incorrect methodologies for the calculation of personnel and indirect costs, notably in the project cost statements provided by beneficiaries of the research framework programmes. It calls on the Commission to systematically remind beneficiaries of the eligibility rules and of the applicable calculation methods, as well as of the requirement to substantiate all declared costs. In this regard it recommends simplification of the EU instruments. With regard specifically to the research framework programmes, the Council encourages the Commission to continue to improve its methods and procedures, while maintaining an appropriate balance between trust and control and without increasing the administrative burden for project promoters and beneficiaries. It also calls for efforts to be made to ensure that project coordinators immediately distribute received funds to other project partners so as to avoid the serious financial consequences on beneficiaries that are highly dependent on EU funding.
· Administrative and other expenditure : finally, the Council is pleased to note that, as in previous years, the administrative expenditure of EU institutions and bodies remained free from material error with an estimated error rate of 0%, and that their supervisory and control systems continued to comply with the requirements of the Financial Regulation.
Conclusion : by way of conclusion, the Council calls on all actors in the Commission, the Court and Member States to take advantage of the new legal framework agreed for the new multiannual programming period 2014-2020 and to pursue efforts towards developing a performance framework as to ensure that expected results and impacts laid down in the sector-specific regulations are achieved. This includes, among others, a consistent application of SMART objectives, using milestones and suitable indicators to evaluate on an annual basis the performance of multiannual programmes.
The Council finally underlines the importance of clearer and better understanding of the concept of the EU added value and invites all actors, the Commission, the Court and Member States to contribute to its further development.
Having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes, and in particular Article 14(3) thereof and to Commission Regulation (EC) No 1653/2004 on a standard financial regulation for the executive agencies, the Council addressed the following recommendations to the European Parliament as regards the discharge to the given to the executive agencies.
At its meeting on 29 January 2014, the Budget Committee examined the six specific annual reports of the European Court of Auditors related to executive agencies.
Having examined the revenue and expenditure accounts for the financial year 2012 and the balance sheet at 31 December 2012 as well as the report by the Court of Auditors on the annual accounts of the Executive Agencies, accompanied by the Executive Agency's replies, the Council hereby recommended the European Parliament to give a discharge to the Director of the Executive Agency in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012.
The Council considers that a certain number of observations should be taken into account when granting discharge.
The Council's recommendations may be summarised as follows:
as regards the Executive Agency Education , Audiovisual and Culture , the Council invites the Executive Agency to limit the amount of carry-overs, in line with the budgetary principle of annuality; as regards the Executive Agency for Competitiveness and Innovation , the Council urges the Executive Agency to comply with the international standards of internal control and to separate the Internal Audit Capability (IAC) and the ex-post verifications that are part of the internal control system, in order to ensure the independence of its Internal Audit function. It also encourages the Executive Agency to pursue its efforts in addressing the failures detected by the Court in its recruitment procedures; as regards the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers , the Council urges the Executive Agency to continue paying due attention to the respect of the budgetary principle of annuality and to avoid, as far as possible, any excessive carry-overs; as regards the Executive Agency of the Trans-European Transport Network , the Council also urges the Executive Agency to continue paying due attention to the respect of the budgetary principle of annuality and to avoid, as far as possible, any excessive carry-overs; as regards the Executive Agency for the Research , the Council calls on the Executive Agency to pay due attention to the respect of the provisions laid down in the Financial Regulation and its Rules of Application concerning the subdelegation of powers of the Authorising Officer when making payment orders. with regard to the European Research Council Executive Agency , the Council made no particular comment.
FOLLOW-UP TO THE 2011 COMMISSION DISCHARGE: FOLLOW-UP TO THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT
AND OF THE COUNCIL
Preliminary comment: this document is the Commission's report to the European Parliament (EP) and the Council on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year, pursuant to Article 319(3) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. The Commission’s responses to each of the Parliament and Council’s requests are available in two Commission Staff working documents (published in SEC(2013)348 and SEC(2013)349 and attached to this procedure file).
This report summarises the Commission’s responses to the main requests of the European Parliament and of the Council.
CONTENT: the report indicates that in the European Parliament’s discharge resolution, the Commission agreed to start new actions on 181 requests (143 from the EP and 38 from the Council). F or 252 other requests (205 from the EP and 47 from the Council), the required action has already been taken or is on-going, though in some cases the results of the actions will need to be assessed. Lastly, for reasons related to the existing legal and budgetary framework or its institutional role or prerogatives, the Commission cannot accept 41 requests (39 from the EP3 and 2 from the Council).
The Commission’s responses to the requests of the EP and the Council may be summarised as follows:
Priority actions: in its resolution, Parliament specifically highlights four priority actions of institutional accountability and financial nature.
1. Communication on the protection of the EU budget: the EP requested the Commission to present a Communication on the protection of the EU budget, with a view to making public all the amounts corrected and recovered in the course of the preceding year. The Communication sas to be presented in September 2013 and demonstrate that corrections and recoveries have increased considerably in the last few years.
2. Actions relating to error rates: for shared management, the EP requested the Commission to harmonise the practices concerning the interruption/suspension of payments when significant deficiencies are detected at the level of the supervisory and control systems of the Member States. The Commission indicates that interruptions and suspensions are intensively used as shown in various Commission reports and that it is its firm intention to continue using these tools. The Commission's actions in this regard have been further harmonized in 2012, in particular in the area of Cohesion policy.
As regards agriculture, Commission Regulation No 883/2006 was amended in April 2013 with the objective to facilitate interruptions of Rural Development payments to the Member States already in the current programming period in case of deficiencies. However, a full harmonisation across all policy areas is not possible under the current legal framework . For the new programming period 2014-2020, the Commission's proposal for common provisions on the Funds foresees a further harmonisation of the interruption of payments for all these Funds, including Rural Development.
Other technical measures were proposed to simplify national eligibility rules for the Structural Funds, avoid “gold-plating” and provide for joint assessment between Managing Authorities and Paying Agencies, Member States (MS) to ensure that all the rural development measures they intend to implement are verifiable and comparable.
As regards the identification of so-called “systemic” errors, the Commission indicates that it intends to make considerable efforts to ensure strict compliance with eligibility requirements and the correct application of public procurement rules , through training and guidance to programme managing authorities who should in their turn transmit this knowledge to all bodies in charge of managing the funds. It has also shared with MS an analysis of the types of procurement errors detected by EU audits in cohesion policy during previous years.
Under the same priority action, the EP also had some requests concerning three specific directorates-general (AGRI, REGIO and Research).
3. Enhanced use of performance audits: the European Parliament asked the Commission to place the emphasis on the progress made in the achievement of the (EU 2020) flagship initiatives. It also calls for an enhanced use of performance audits.
The Commission has presented an action plan as part of the Evaluation report on the year 2012, which was adopted on 26 June 2013. This action plan includes actions to integrate performance information from the Strategic Planning and Programming Cycle . This includes the integration of elements of progress and performance management in the Management Plan for 2014 (setting objectives, performance indicators and associated targets per programme, evaluations planned).
4. Actions concerning revenues and traditional own resources:
the EP invited the Commission to provide it with an evaluation of the cost of postponing the full application of the Modernised Customs Code (MCC) in time for the 2012 discharge procedure. It also requested the Commission to collect reliable data on the customs and VAT gap in the MS and report every six months to the EP in this regard. In this field, the Commission is providing technical assistance to certain Member States and has taken a series of actions to support Member States in their fight against tax fraud and tax evasion.
On the issue of the impact of uncollected revenues on the availability of the Union Own resources , the Commission underlines that each revenue stream is characterised by a different risk profile. For traditional own resources, the Commission has repeatedly drawn Member States’ attention to recovery issues and strengthened awareness by applying the principle of financial responsibility if non-recovery can be attributed to a MS. As far as VAT is concerned, by far the greater financial incentive arising from effective recovery accrues to MS: for every euro collected a minimum of 97 cents goes to national budgets, while the much smaller part 3 cents flows to the EU .
Horizontal issues :
Responsibility of the Commission and the MSs in shared management: Parliament noted that the Commission should give guidance to MS to draft meaningful annual summaries (AS) and considers that AS should be put at the disposal of the EP and should not only be made available in the language of the Member State. Guidelines on the form and content of the AS were provided to Member States in 2010. However, the Commission considers that requesting the Member States to transmit their AS in another language than theirs would affect current regulatory provisions on the use of languages by Member States. Taking duly the principles of proportionality and cost-effectiveness into account, the Commission is committed to provide translation of the most important elements of those documents into English. Reliability of Commission management representations: Parliament suggested establishing a clear link between amounts included in Annual Activity Reports (AARs), for establishing the residual error rate and information on recoveries / financial corrections presented in the accounts. A clear link has been established in the 2012 consolidated accounts. Detailed information on these points appears in the 2012 AARs and in the 2012 Synthesis Report. Anti-fraud Strategy: Parliament called on the Commission to report on and evaluate the anti-fraud strategies established within each directorate general. The Commission will report to Parliament and Council in 2014 on the implementation of its anti-Fraud strategy starting with the Commission report on the protection of the EU financial interests for the year 2013. Tobacco Industry : lastly, Parliament called on the Commission to report on how it intends to improve its provisions to introduce a pro-active management of potential conflicts of interest and "revolving doors". The Commission considers that the legal framework applicable to all institutions and the implementation provisions adopted by each institution are a solid basis for dealing with all issues relating to conflicts of interest, including the so-called revolving door cases. These rules are proactively managed by the Commission. On the whole, the Commission believes that the ethical framework applying to Members and staff is fully compatible with this provision.
FOLLOW-UP TO THE 2011 COMMISSION DISCHARGE – REPLIES TO REQUESTS FROM THE COMMISSION
This Commission Staff Working Paper completes the Report from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council on the Follow-up to the 2011 Discharge.
An overview of these replies can be found in COM(2013)0668 (please refer to the summary of the document in question).
It presents in detail the answers to 87 specific requests made by the Council in the comments accompanying its Recommendation.
FOLLOW-UP TO THE 2011 COMMISSION DISCHARGE – REPLIES TO REQUESTS FROM THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT
This Commission Staff Working Paper completes the Report from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council on the Follow-up to the 2011 Discharge.
An overview of these replies can be found in COM(2013)0668 (please refer to the summary of the document in question).
It presents in detail the answers to 387 specific requests made by the European Parliament in its Resolutions.
PURPOSE: presentation of the Report of the European Court of Auditors (ECA) on the implementation of the 2012 budget (Commission).
CONTENT: the Court of Auditors published its 36th Annual Report on the implementation of the EU budget for the 2012 financial year. This report has a two-part structure:
a first part devoted to the work of the Court relating to the reliability of the accounts and the regularity of the operations, a second part focusing on the audit findings regarding the revenues and expenditures of the EU (in groups of policies) and on the analysis of the expenditure of the other institutions and bodies of the European Union.
The Statement of Assurance (“DAS”) regarding the reliability of the annual accounts of the EU as well as the legality and regularity of the transactions is the central element of this report.
DAS : the main conclusion of the 2012 Statement of Assurance is that all policy groups were affected by a material level of error : the Court considers that the consolidated accounts of the European Union present fairly , in all material respects, the financial position of the Union as at 31 December 2012 . It also concluded that:
1) revenue underlying the accounts for the year ended 31 December 2012 is legal and regular in all material respects;
2) commitments underlying the accounts for the year ended 31 December 2012 are legal and regular in all material respects;
3) the supervisory and control systems examined are partially effective in ensuring the legality and regularity of payments underlying the accounts. All policy groups covering operational expenditure are materially affected by error . The Court’s estimate for the most likely error rate for expensed payments underlying the accounts is 4.8%.
ECA key messages relating to the DAS : this year’s results again show an increase in overall estimated error rates. The most likely error for payments taken as a whole has increased from 3.9% to 4.8% in 2012. The estimated error rate has increased every year since 2009, after having fallen in the three previous years:
- the most error-prone areas : rural development, environment, fisheries and health remains the most error ‑ prone spending area with an estimated error rate of 7.9%, followed by regional policy, energy and transport with an estimated error rate of 6.8%;
- in general, errors concern payments made to beneficiaries or to ineligible projects or the purchase of goods, services or investments without respecting public procurement rules ;
- the substantial gap between appropriations for commitment and payment, coupled with a large amount of underspending at the start of the current programming period , has caused a build ‑ up of the equivalent of 2 years and 3 months’ worth of unused commitments (EUR 217 billion at the end of 2012). This leads to pressure on the budget for payments. To resolve that situation, the Court recommends that it is essential that the Commission plans its payment requirements for the medium and long ‑ term;
- for many areas of the EU budget the legislative framework is complex and there is insufficient focus on performance. The proposals on agriculture and cohesion for the 2014–2020 programming period remain fundamentally input ‑ based (expenditure oriented) and therefore still focused on compliance with the rules rather than performance.
Other characteristics of the 2012 budget implementation : in 2012, the EU faced a number of financial management challenges in implementing its budget. These including dealing with an increasing level of final payments as the current financial framework draws to a close together with the effects of pressure on national financing. Payments from the EU budget for 2012 totalled EUR 138.6 billion. For around 80 % of the spending – agriculture and cohesion – the task of implementation is shared between the Commission and the EU’s Member States. The Court states that for a significant number of transactions affected by error, the Member States authorities had sufficient information available to have detected and corrected the error . With the rules in force for the current period of expenditure (2007-2013), Member States are strongly encouraged to use more efficiently the financial management systems in force.
Outstanding budgetary commitments (RAL) : as the EU prepares spending programmes for the 2014-20 financial framework, considerable financial commitments from previous years remain unspent - this will put added pressure on EU cash flows and may increase the risk of error over the next few years. There is an important opportunity now for the EU institutions and the Member States to use the lessons learned during the current financial framework to improve EU financial management in the next financial framework period.
Analysis of budget implementation by expenditure groups and recommendations of the Court :
Agriculture (EUR 44.5 billion): a majority of expenditure in this spending area is calculated based on agricultural land surface. Many quantifiable errors are the result of inaccurate claims by beneficiaries, with the most frequent being over-declaration of land area. The Court stresses that in Spain, Austria and Portugal some land claimed and paid for as permanent pasture was in reality fully or partly covered with rocks, dense forests or bushes. This should exclude them from EU aid. The Court found infringements in 16% of the transactions subject to cross-compliance obligations . The Court recommends that the Commission and Member States increase and speed up their efforts to ensure that: (i) immediate remedial action is taken where administrative and control systems and/or IACS databases are found to be deficient or out of date; (ii) payments are based on inspection results and that on-the-spot inspections are of the quality necessary to determine the eligible area in a reliable manner. Rural development, environment, fisheries and health (EUR 15 billion): the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD) represents 90% of the payments. Management of the spending is shared with Member States. The reason for most errors was that the beneficiaries did not respect the eligibility requirements, in particular those concerning agri-environment commitments, specific requirements for investment projects and procurement rules. The Court stresses that a beneficiary in Poland committed to respect specific requirements relating to the maintenance of extensive permanent grassland. The main commitment was to leave every year, on a different surface area, 5 to 10% of the applicable surface uncut, for which the beneficiary would receive EUR 270 per hectare. The ECA found that the requirements were not met: the fields were either completely cut or the uncut area was the same as in previous years or in a different location to that indicated by the ornithological expert. The Court recommends in the area of rural development that: (i) Member States carry out their existing administrative checks better, by using all relevant information available to the paying agencies; (ii) the Commission ensures that all cases where the Court detected errors are followed up appropriately. Regional policy, energy and transport (EUR 40.7 billion): the audit covered regional policy, which is mostly financed through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the Cohesion Fund (CF). The Court found serious failures to respect public procurement rules. Such errors accounted for 52 % of the error rate estimated by the ECA. The combined estimated contract value for the 247 audited public procurements amounted to EUR 6.3 billion. Amongst the examples given, the Court highlights the case of the construction of a high-speed railway line in France, two civil engineering contracts were directly awarded to the same company that had previously provided similar services. Such a direct award is not in line with the applicable procurement rules and the contract should have been put out to tender. The Court recommends that the Commission: (i) carries out an assessment of the use of national eligibility rules with a view to identifying possible areas for further simplification and eliminating unnecessarily complex rules (‘gold-plating’); (ii) specifies clear rules and provides robust guidance on how to assess the eligibility of projects and calculate the co-financing for revenue generating projects under the 2014-20 programming period. Employment and social affairs (EUR 13.4 billion): the European Social Fund (ESF) is the main tool for the implementation of employment and social policy. Management of the spending is shared with Member States. The majority of errors detected – 74 % of the estimated error rate – concerned the reimbursement of ineligible costs, projects, beneficiaries or participants. Support was given to Spanish companies hiring unemployed persons. A condition for participants was that the employers had to maintain the newly employed staff for a minimum period of three or, in some cases, up to five years. This condition was not respected for 12 persons. The Court recommends that the Commission: (i) carries out an assessment of the use of national eligibility rules in order to identify possible areas for further simplification and eliminating unnecessarily complex rules; and (ii) promotes the extensive use of lump-sum and flat-rate payments in order to reduce the risk of error in cost declarations and the administrative burden on beneficiaries. External relations, aid and enlargement (EUR 6.6 billion): development projects are dispersed throughout more than 150 countries, and the implementing organisations vary greatly both in size and experience. To be eligible for EU support, projects, are required to comply with conditions set out in specific financing agreements as well as other rules covering, for example, tendering and contract award procedures. Spending is implemented directly by Commission directorates ‑ general, either from their headquarters in Brussels or by EU delegations in recipient countries, or jointly with international organisations. A majority of errors involve ineligible expenditure incurred at final beneficiary level, such as: expenditure incurred outside the eligibility period; inclusion of ineligible expenditure (e.g. VAT, staff costs and unjustified overheads) charged in the project cost claims and expenditure without adequate supporting documents. The Court recommends that the Commission: (i) ensures timely clearance of expenditure; (ii) promotes better document management by implementing partners and beneficiaries; (iii) improves the management of contract-awarding procedures by setting out clear selection criteria and documenting the evaluation process better; (iv) takes effective steps in order to enhance the quality of expenditure checks carried out by external auditors. Research and other internal policies (EUR 10.7 billion): the main source of error remains the inclusion of ineligible costs in research FPs project cost statements, and the use of incorrect methodologies by FP beneficiaries for the calculation of personnel and indirect costs. The Court detected several errors in the costs which a beneficiary involved in a research project declared to the Commission: incorrectly calculated personnel costs based on budgeted rather than actual figures, unsubstantiated travel costs, and indirect costs based on incorrectly calculated hourly overhead rates and including ineligible cost categories not linked to the project. The Court recommends that the Commission: (i) further intensifies its efforts to address the errors found, in particular by reminding beneficiaries and independent auditors of the eligibility rules and the requirement for beneficiaries to substantiate all declared costs; (ii) reminds research FP project coordinators of their responsibility to distribute the funds received to the other project partners without undue delay. Administrative and other expenditure (EUR 10 billion): spending on human resources (salaries, allowances and pensions), account for 60 % of the spending area; expenditure on buildings, equipment, energy, communications and information technology accounts for the remainder. The Court states that no significant errors were found here.
Recommendations of the Court of Auditors : for each of these areas of expenditure, the Court made a series of recommendations aimed at improving EU financial management. This improvement is essential given the pressure on the public finances of the Union and the Member States. Expenditure, therefore, must be carried out in a way that is still more efficient and better targeted .
Overall, the Court invites the Commission to review the regulation applicable to EU expenditure and recommends it to simplify the legislative framework in this respect.
PURPOSE: presentation by the Commission of the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012, as part of the 2012 discharge procedure.
Analysis of the accounts of the EU Institutions: Section III - European Commission .
Legal reminder: the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the year 2012 have been prepared on the basis of the information presented by the institutions and bodies under Article 129(2) of the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Union. They were prepared in accordance with Title VII of the Financial Regulation and with the accounting principles, rules and methods set out in the notes to the financial statements.
The objective of the financial statements is to provide information about the financial position, performance and cashflow of a body that is useful to a wide range of users. The objective is to provide information that is useful for decision making, and to demonstrate the accountability of the entity for the resources entrusted to it.
1) Purpose: the document helps to bring insight into the EU budget mechanism and the way in which the budget has been managed and spent in 2012 . It recalls that the European Union's operational expenditure covers the various headings of the financial framework and takes different forms, depending on how the money is paid out and managed. In accordance with the Financial Regulation, the Commission implements the general budget using the following methods: direct or indirect centralised management (by means of bodies or agencies of public law or other); decentralised management where the Commission delegates certain tasks for the implementation of the budget to third countries; and, thirdly, shared management where budget implementation tasks are delegated to Member States, in areas such as agricultural expenditure and structural actions.
The document also presents the different financial actors involved in the budget process (accounting officers, internal officers and authorising officers) and recalls their respective roles in the context of the tasks of sound financial management.
Amongst the other legal elements relating to the implementation of the EU budget presented in this document, the paper focuses on the following issues:
accounting principles applicable to the management of EU spending (business continuity, consistency of accounting methods, comparability of information ...); consolidation methods of figures for all major controlled entities (the consolidated financial statements of the EU comprise all significant controlled entities –institutions, organisations and agencies); the recognition of financial assets in the EU (tangible and intangible assets, financial assets and other miscellaneous investments); the way in which EU public expenditure is committed and spent, including pre-financing (cash advances intended for the benefit of an EU organ); the means of recovery following irregularities detected; the modus operandi of the accounting system; the audit process followed by the European Parliament's granting of the discharge.
To recap, the final control is the discharge of the budget for a given financial year . The discharge represents the political aspect of the external control of budget implementation and is the decision by which the European Parliament, acting on a Council recommendation, "releases" the Commission from its responsibility for management of a given budget by marking the end of that budget's existence.
The document also details specific expenditure of the institutions, in particular: i) pensions of former Members and officials of institutions; ii) joint sickness insurance scheme and iii) buildings.
The document also presents a series of tables and detailed technical indicators on (i) the balance sheet; (ii) the economic outturn account; (iii) cashflow tables; (iv) technical annexes concerning the financial statements.
2) Balance sheet of financial implementation: achievements and difficulties in implementation: in addition to legal aspects regarding the way in which the Union’s expenditures are implemented, the document highlights the difficulties relating to the management and execution of certain of the Union’s expenditures.
(a) Financial correction and recoveries: the document provides an overview of the correction of errors and irregularities discovered, in particular in the part of the EU’s budget that is implemented by means of shared management ( i.e. some 80% of the total budget ). In the context of shared management, the Commission relies on Member States for the implementation of EU programmes i.e. the EU contribution is paid to the Member States, generally to a specific paying agency, which is then responsible for the payments made to beneficiaries. As a result, Member States are the primary party responsible for the prevention, detection and correction of errors and irregularities committed by the beneficiaries , while the European Commission ensures an overall supervisory role (i.e. verifying the effective functioning of Member States’ management and control systems).
The details provided by the Commission in its consolidated document only cover financial corrections and recoveries effected at EU level. The corrections effected by Member States following their own audits are not recorded in the Commission’s accounting system because Member States can reuse, in most cases, these amounts for other eligible expenditure. Member States are however requested to provide the Commission with updated information on withdrawals, recoveries and pending recoveries of Structural Funds, and to separately identify EU corrections in the reporting related to the 2007-2013 period to avoid an overlap risk.
Suspensions and interruptions: there may be interruptions or total suspension of payments where there is evidence of significant deficiencies in the functioning of the management and control systems of the Member State concerned in particular with regard to policy cohesion. Total pending cases to this effect at 31.12.2012 amounted to EUR 1 639 million, the Member States particularly targeted were Italy and Poland. Concerning ERDF and the Cohesion Fund, suspension decisions were taken for 2 programmes in Germany and in Italy. Both suspensions were still effective at 31 December 2012. Concerning ESF, 2 suspension decisions were adopted in 2012 and concerned the Czech Republic and Slovakia; Financial corrections: financial corrections are the main tool used for the correction of errors and irregularities in the context of shared management. Financial corrections are made by the European Commission so as to exclude from EU funding expenditure that is not in accordance with applicable rules and regulations. In 2012, more than half of the EUR 1 161 million financial corrections confirmed/decided in 2012 ( EUR 631 million ) concern the current programming period 2007-2013 as a result of stricter supervision by the Commission and a growing number of audits completed at this stage of implementation of the programmes. The amount of corrections decided/confirmed in 2012 related to the programming period 2007-2013 is mainly explained by corrections concerning Spain (EUR 267 million), the Czech Republic (EUR 111 million), Greece (EUR 82 million) and Poland (EUR 77 million). These amounts do not include corrections to expenditure declared by beneficiaries at Recoveries: recovery of amounts is a means of implementing financial corrections that merit a separate disclosure given that it concerns actual return of cash to the budget (or offsetting). These sums mainly concern the Common Agricultural Policy and Cohesion Policy. In 2012, the document states that these two sectors plus ‘others’ in the EU budget resulted in recoveries of around EUR 678 million .
(b) Pre-financing: pre-financing is a payment intended to provide the beneficiary with a cash advance, i.e. a float. If the beneficiary does not incur eligible expenditures, he has the obligation to return the pre-financing advance to the European Union. At 31.12.2012, total long-term pre-financings amounted to EUR 44.505 billion compared with EUR 44.723 million at the end of 2011. Pre-financing represents a large portion of the EU’s total assets, and thus receives proper and regular attention. It should be noted that the level of pre-financing amounts in the various programmes must be sufficient to ensure the necessary float for the beneficiary to start the project, while also safeguarding the financial interests of the EU and taking into consideration legal, operational and cost-effectiveness constraints.
The most significant non-current pre-financing amounts relate to Structural Actions for the 2007-2013 programming period : the regional development fund (ERDF) and the cohesion fund (CF) EUR 23.9 billion, the social fund (ESF) EUR 6.5 billion, the agricultural fund for rural development (EAFRD) EUR 6.1 billion and the fisheries fund (EFF) EUR 0.6 billion. As many of these projects are long-term in nature, it is necessary that the related advances are available for more than one year.
(c) RAL (budgetary commitments made, payments still pending): the budgetary RAL ("Reste à Liquider")) is an amount representing the open commitments for which payments and/or de-commitments have not yet been made. At 31 December 2012, the budgetary RAL amounted to EUR 217.81 billion .
(d) Borrowing and lending activities of the EU: the document also specifies that the EU is empowered by the EU Treaty to adopt borrowing programmes to mobilise the financial resources necessary to fulfil its mandate.
European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM): the EFSF’s mandate is to safeguard financial stability in Europe by providing financial assistance to Eurozone Member States. The EFSF does not provide new lending after 1 July 2013, in keeping with the current Framework Agreement. It is backed by guarantee commitments from the Eurozone Member States for a total of EUR 780 billion and has a lending capacity of EUR 440 billion. It is not guaranteed by the EU budget . The EFSF is a Luxembourg-registered commercial company owned by euro-area Member States outside the EU Treaty framework and thus is not an EU body and is entirely separate from and not consolidated in the EU accounts. Consequently it has no impact on the EU accounts, aside from the possible sanctions.
Loans outstanding at 31.12.2012 : EUR 103 900 million .
European Stability Mechanism (ESM): the ESM has assumed the tasks fulfilled by the EFSM and, as from 1 July 2013, the tasks fulfilled by the EFSF becoming the sole and permanent mechanism for responding to new requests for financial assistance to Eurozone Member States. Consequently, the EFSF and the EFSM will no longer engage in new financing programmes or enter into new loan facility agreements, but will remain active in financing the on-going programmes for Portugal, Ireland and Greece . The creation of the ESM will thus not have an impact on the existing commitments under the EFSM. It must also be noted that the EU budget will not guarantee ESM borrowings. The ESM is backed by a robust capital structure, with a total subscribed capital of EUR 700 billion, of which EUR 80 billion in the form of paid-in capital provided by the Eurozone Member States. Loans outstanding at 31.12.2012 : EUR 39 468 million .
The document also examines the financial risks incurred by the EU and the mechanisms set in place to ensure the management of these risks.
3) Implementation of the budget for the 2012 financial year: the document also comprises a series of annexes containing figures, the most important of which relates to budgetary implementation:
(a) table on the implementation of commitment appropriations by heading and rate of implementation:
Sustainable growth: EUR 69 billion; rate of implementation: 97.4%; Preservation and management of natural resources: EUR 60.817 billion; 97.78% Citizenship, freedom, security and justice: EUR 2.892 billion; 98.21%; EU as a global player: EUR 9.753 billion; 98.21%; Administration: EUR 8.822 billion; 96.81%.
Total commitments: EUR 151.284 billion; 97.55%.
(b) table on the execution of payment appropriations by heading and rate of implementation:
Sustainable growth: EUR 61.585 billion; rate of implementation: 96.60%; Preservation and management of natural resources: EUR 59.096 billion; 97.83% Citizenship, freedom, security and justice: EUR 2.375 billion; 95.86%; EU as a global player: EUR 7.064 billion; 98.35%; Administration: EUR 8.564 billion; 87.18%.
Total payments: EUR 138.683 billion; 96.55%.
(c) budget implementation – conclusions: lastly, the document provides details on the implementation of the budget in more political terms. Financial year 2012 was the sixth annual budget implemented in the current MFF. For further details of the budgetary implementation of expenditures of Section III of the budget, please refer to the EU Budget 2012 – Financial Report . The financial year 2012 has been another year marked by a very high execution of the budget and the financial support activities of the EU for Member States under the EFSM facility. The level of long-term advance payments (pre-financing) remains stable at EUR 44.5 billion, practically the same as in 2011.
For commitments, the authorised budget, and hence the political targets set, were fully implemented (99.6%). The total level of payment appropriations was increased at the end of the year through Amending Budget 6/2012 for an amount EUR 6 billion.
The shortage of payments affected nearly all headings , and in particular heading 1b Cohesion for Growth and Employment. It must also be recalled that the EUR 6 billion agreed was EUR 3 billion less that the amount requested by the Commission. Finally, the 2012 budget result of EUR 1 019 million for the Union was returned to the Member States during 2013 through deduction of their contributions due for that year.
Cruising speed : the year 2012 was the sixth and penultimate year of the current programming period 2007-13. All major programmes were at cruising speed, and the inflow of payment claim increased significantly, as is normal as the cycle draws to a close.
Pursuant to Title VII of the Financial Regulation, the Commission presented a paper on the certification of the accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012.
The paper proposes a consolidated overview of the financial statements of the EU budget with indicative tables outlining heading by heading expenditure as well as indicative and explanatory notes to the consolidated accounts.
The document presents in partuclar:
the budget sheet (assets - liabilities); a statement of financial performance; cashflow statement; the statement of changes in net assets of the budget.
The second part of the paper focuses on the implementation of the budget and refers in particular to the difficulties encountered due to the lack of payment appropriations at the end of the fiscal year .
Documents
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex
- Follow-up document: SWD(2015)0125
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex
- Follow-up document: COM(2014)0383
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex
- Follow-up document: SWD(2014)0200
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex
- Follow-up document: SWD(2014)0201
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T7-0287/2014
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A7-0242/2014
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: COM(2014)0120
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: SWD(2014)0060
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE529.709
- Committee opinion: PE524.746
- Committee opinion: PE526.147
- Document attached to the procedure: 05848/2014
- Committee opinion: PE524.571
- Committee opinion: PE524.623
- Committee opinion: PE524.560
- Committee opinion: PE524.607
- Committee opinion: PE526.210
- Committee opinion: PE524.543
- Supplementary non-legislative basic document: 05850/2014
- Committee opinion: PE524.569
- Committee draft report: PE521.558
- Committee opinion: PE523.109
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: COM(2013)0668
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: SWD(2013)0348
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: SWD(2013)0349
- Court of Auditors: opinion, report: OJ C 331 14.11.2013, p. 0001
- Court of Auditors: opinion, report: N7-0049/2014
- Non-legislative basic document published: EUR-Lex
- Non-legislative basic document published: COM(2013)0570
- Supplementary non-legislative basic document: COM(2013)0558
- Supplementary non-legislative basic document: EUR-Lex
- Supplementary non-legislative basic document: COM(2013)0558 EUR-Lex
- Court of Auditors: opinion, report: OJ C 331 14.11.2013, p. 0001 N7-0049/2014
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex COM(2013)0668
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex SWD(2013)0348
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex SWD(2013)0349
- Committee opinion: PE523.109
- Committee draft report: PE521.558
- Supplementary non-legislative basic document: 05850/2014
- Committee opinion: PE524.569
- Committee opinion: PE524.543
- Committee opinion: PE524.560
- Committee opinion: PE524.607
- Committee opinion: PE526.210
- Committee opinion: PE524.571
- Committee opinion: PE524.623
- Document attached to the procedure: 05848/2014
- Committee opinion: PE526.147
- Committee opinion: PE524.746
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE529.709
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex COM(2014)0120
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex SWD(2014)0060
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex COM(2014)0383
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex SWD(2014)0200
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex SWD(2014)0201
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex SWD(2015)0125
Amendments | Dossier |
62 |
2013/2195(DEC)
2013/12/18
ENVI
18 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 10 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 7 7.
Amendment 11 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 7 7.
Amendment 12 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 10 10. Considers the progress in the implementation of six Pilot Projects (PPs) and five Preparatory Actions (PAs) amounting all together to EUR 15.733.692 as
Amendment 13 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 10 10. Considers the progress in the implementation of six Pilot Projects (PPs)
Amendment 14 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 11 11. Notes that DG SANCO was responsible to implement EUR 230.436.939 on public health budget lines in 2012 of which 99,3% have been committed satisfactorily; is however aware that roughly 77% of that budget is directly transferred to three decentralised agencies (ECDC, EFSA and EMA); agrees also
Amendment 15 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 13 13. Notes the observations by the Court of Auditors on the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers, an administrative entity of the Commission; is aware that the Executive Agency was responsible to implement EUR 37.8 million in commitments available to the Public health programme in 2012 and for EUR 35.5 million in payment appropriations
Amendment 16 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 13 13. Notes the observations by the Court of Auditors on the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers, an administrative entity of the Commission; is aware that the Executive Agency was responsible
Amendment 17 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 16 16. Is of the opinion, on the basis of the data available and the implementation report, that discharge
Amendment 18 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 16 16. Is of the opinion, on the basis of the data available and the implementation report, that discharge
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. With regard to the overall implementation of the budgetary headings for environment, climate action, public health and food safety in 2012, the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety is not fully satisfied; recalls again that less than 0,8 per cent of the Union budget is dedicated to those policy instruments bearing in mind the clear EU added value in these fields and the support from European citizens for EU environmental and climate policies as well as for public health and food safety;
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. With regard to the overall implementation of the budgetary headings for environment, climate action, public health and food safety in 2012, the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety is satisfied; re
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. With regard to the overall implementation of the budgetary headings for environment, climate action, public health and food safety in 2012, the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety is not fully satisfied; recalls again that less than 0,8 per cent of the Union budget is dedicated to those policy instruments bearing in mind the clear EU added value in these fields and the support from European citizens for EU environmental and climate policies as well as for public health and food safety;
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 a (new) 4a. Believes that the discharge decision should be based upon OECD guidelines to ensure high quality internationally recognised accounting, audit and financial disclosure standards; invites the European institutions to incorporate and commit to introducing OECD guidelines within a common framework for all European institutions and bodies;
Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 a (new) 4a. Believes that the discharge decision should be based upon OECD guidelines to ensure high quality internationally recognised accounting, audit and financial disclosure standards; invites the European institutions to incorporate and commit to introducing OECD guidelines within a common framework for all European institutions and bodies;
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. takes note that DG CLIMA has
Amendment 9 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. takes note that DG CLIMA has
source: PE-526.140
2013/12/23
PECH
2 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph E E. Notes with concern that the Court of Auditors draws attention in its report to a high overall error rate; deeply regrets that this error rate has risen by comparison with the previous financial year but also notes the change in the Court's sampling method; deplores the fact that the information submitted by the Court of Auditors is not more specific to the policy areas concerned;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph K K. Urges the Court of Auditors once again to include an audit on the external dimension of the common fisheries policy
source: PE-526.141
2014/01/07
EMPL
3 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1. Welcomes that the Court of Auditors continued to assess the area of Employment and social affairs through a sample of high number of transactions; regrets the increased error rate for this policy field, which stood at 3.2% in 2012 compared to 2.2% in the previous year; notes that this error rate was still the lowest amongst all policy areas; and asks the Court of Auditors to assess also the budget lines with less financial allocations in the area of employment and social affairs;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. Notes the observations of the Court of Auditors concerning the benefits of the use of simplified cost options, which reduces the risk of error and administrative burden on beneficiaries;
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Is aware of the fact that simplified cost options can reduce the frequency of errors but suggests that in this case misapplication of rules remains undetected.
source: PE-526.183
2014/01/08
AFET
10 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1.
Amendment 10 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 a (new) 5a. Recalls its recommendation to re-use materials utilised in election observation missions in other such missions or EU delegations in order to reduce their budgetary impact and maximise the use of budgetary resources;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1.
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Supports all of the Court of Auditors’ recommendations with regard to Heading 4, in particular for the improvement of supervisory and control systems with regard to the clearing of advances
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Supports all of the Court of Auditors recommendation with regard to Heading 4, in particular for the improvement of supervisory and control systems with regard to the clearing of advances
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Supports all of the Court of Auditors recommendation with regard to Heading 4, in particular for the improvement of supervisory and control systems with regard to the clearing of advances, while recalling that the Union's external assistance is implemented partly by entities external to the Union, often under difficult conditions including crises and conflicts, and requires a certain amount of adaptability and flexibility and speed to be effective; Insists that, nevertheless, the European Commission must strengthen its control of the results and effectiveness of European assistance implemented by third organisations;
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. Notes that under the general budget for the financial year 2012 budget support payments totalled EUR 796 million and payments by way of support to international organisations amounted to EUR 1.4 billion in all; expresses concern at the failure to provide sufficient information about recipient countries’ financial management or the organisations’ projects, and calls on the Commission to remedy the situation;
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Supports the Commission's continuing efforts to shift from an input-based to a performance-oriented approach and urges the adoption of specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and timed
Amendment 9 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Supports the Commission's continuing efforts to shift from an input-based to a performance- and impact-oriented approach and urges the adoption of specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and timed benchmarks for all programmes in Heading 4 as advocated by the Court of Auditors; expresses its hope that these programmes will not be affected by the same shortcomings as those audited in this year's report;
source: PE-526.304
2014/01/16
CULT
2 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 a (new) 1a. Is pleased to see that in 2012, the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) moved from the initial start-up phase to a consolidation of activities with the existing three KICs with ambitious plans for enhancing the KIC portfolio;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. Welcomes the Commission's objective to support TV, Radio and Internet within the communication and media activities in their annual activity report 2012, where the Commission aims to support independent reporting on EU affairs in their own language; w
source: PE-526.280
2014/01/20
REGI
9 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2.
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 a (new) 2 a. Notes that any error, regardless of size or gravity, in a public procurement procedure leads the Court of Auditors to classify the entire expenditure on that procedure as an error, even when no financial loss has been incurred and the project has been delivered as planned;
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 a (new) 2 a. Draws attention to the different approach by the Commission and the Court to the calculation of error rate in relation to transactions to which the Commission applied flat-rate corrections and calls for the standardisation of the methodology;
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Notes that the
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 a (new) 4 a. Draws attention to the multiannuality of the cohesion policy management system and underlines that the final evaluation of irregularities related to the policy implementation will be possible only at the closure of the programming period;
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the new rules for the 2014- 2020 programming period, decided through the co-decision procedure, including measures such as the designations of audit and certifying authorities, accreditations of audit authorities, audit examination and acceptance of accounts, financial corrections and net financial corrections, proportional control, ex-ante conditionalities that aim to further contribute to the reduction of the level of error; supports in this respect also the growing results orientation and the thematic concentration of cohesion policy that should assure high added-value of the co-financed operations.
Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the new rules for the 2014- 2020 programming period, decided through the co-decision procedure, including measures such as the designations of audit and certifying authorities, accreditations of audit authorities, audit examination and acceptance of accounts, financial corrections and net financial corrections, proportional control, ex-ante conditionalities that aim to further contribute to the reduction of the level of error; welcomes also the definition of serious deficiency and the anticipated increased level of corrections for repeated deficiencies;
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the new rules for the 2014- 2020 programming period, decided through the co-decision procedure, including measures such as the designations of audit and certifying authorities, accreditations of audit authorities, audit examination and acceptance of accounts, financial corrections and net financial corrections, proportional control, ex-ante conditionalities that aim to further contribute to the reduction of the level of error; reminds that the audit shall be performance-oriented.
Amendment 9 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 a (new) 5 a. Welcomes the recent Communication of the Commission outlining the approach towards the application of net financial corrections in the areas of agriculture and cohesion policy in the next programming period; awaits the delegated act laying down detailed rules for the criteria for the assessment of the functioning of management and control systems, for establishing the level of financial corrections to be applied and for applying flat-rate corrections.
source: PE-526.138
2014/01/23
DEVE
1 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. Expresses concern however about the level of the RER, estimated to be 3.6% for EuropeAid/DG DEVCO, and calls on the Commission to reinforce efforts to better analyse, document and explain the main types of errors and to take appropriate measures, including consultation with relevant stakeholders, to reduce errors in the future in particular in the relation to payments to international organisations which accounted for 38% of the overall RER3. __________________ 3
source: PE-527.987
2014/01/29
TRAN
17 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2.
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1. Underlines that under the Treaties the promotion of equality between men and women is a fundamental principle of the European Union and gender issues are cross-sectoral issues; recalls that the issue of gender equality should be incorporated and mainstreamed into all policies and addressed at all levels of the budgetary process; calls therefore on the Court of Auditors to assess the implementation of the general budget of the Union from the gender perspective, where applicable;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2.
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 a (new) 1 a. Stresses that under the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (Article 21) any discrimination shall be prohibited and equality between men and women (Article 23) must be ensured in all areas, including employment, work and pay;
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Notes the Court of Auditors' numerous observations as well as the increase in the estimated error rate as regards the area on employment and social affairs, the policy area primarily covering gender equality aspects; reiterates its call for specific details
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Points out the need for further efforts to develop
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Points out the need for further efforts to develop, where appropriate, gender- specific indicators and data, which would allow to monitor the achievement of the objectives set also from a gender perspective and can be included in the reports on the implementation of the budget; Notes that the budget of the EU for the financial year 2012 should not be a neutral instrument. The strategic and policy orientation under-pinning it should reflect interests and preoccupation of people and thus engendering the budget is the best way of meeting the aspirations and needs of both men and women;
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the 100 % utilisation rate for commitment appropriations and 100 % utilisation rate for payment appropriations for TEN-T projects, as these projects are important in that they aim to integrate transport networks in order to develop the internal market, promote sustainable intermodal mobility and stimulate economic development as well as better employment
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 a (new) 3 a. Points out that the annual reports on the implementation of the budget could include the outcomes of objectives set in terms of equality between women and men;
Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. With regard to TEN-T projects and the Connecting Europe Facility, calls on the Commission to
Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 a (new) 3 a. Stresses that equality between women and men is a precondition for fulfilling the overall EU objectives of growth, employment and social cohesion;
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Demands the Commission to annually involve the European Parliament in due time into TEN-T/CEF co-financing, with information on the choice of transport infrastructure projects and amounts; asks the Commission to inform the European Parliament annually with lists of transport projects and amounts of co- financing through the regional and cohesion funds;
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Calls on the Commission to take into account a gender perspective when projecting payment requirements on medium and long term, when identifying future needs for achieving gender balance and when planning budgetary priorities that partake of the principle of gender equality.
Amendment 9 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 a (new) 4 a. Stresses that defending women's rights and promoting policies to encourage the active participation of women in all aspects of social life are essential to democracy in all countries;
source: PE-528.049
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Pursuant to Title VII of the Financial Regulation, the Commission presented a paper on the certification of the accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012. The paper proposes a consolidated overview of the financial statements of the EU budget with indicative tables outlining heading by heading expenditure as well as indicative and explanatory notes to the consolidated accounts. The document presents in partuclar:
The second part of the paper focuses on the implementation of the budget and refers in particular to the difficulties encountered due to the lack of payment appropriations at the end of the fiscal year. New
PURPOSE: presentation by the Commission of the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012, as part of the 2012 discharge procedure. Analysis of the accounts of the EU Institutions: Section III - European Commission. Legal reminder: the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the year 2012 have been prepared on the basis of the information presented by the institutions and bodies under Article 129(2) of the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Union. They were prepared in accordance with Title VII of the Financial Regulation and with the accounting principles, rules and methods set out in the notes to the financial statements. The objective of the financial statements is to provide information about the financial position, performance and cashflow of a body that is useful to a wide range of users. The objective is to provide information that is useful for decision making, and to demonstrate the accountability of the entity for the resources entrusted to it. 1) Purpose: the document helps to bring insight into the EU budget mechanism and the way in which the budget has been managed and spent in 2012. It recalls that the European Union's operational expenditure covers the various headings of the financial framework and takes different forms, depending on how the money is paid out and managed. In accordance with the Financial Regulation, the Commission implements the general budget using the following methods: direct or indirect centralised management (by means of bodies or agencies of public law or other); decentralised management where the Commission delegates certain tasks for the implementation of the budget to third countries; and, thirdly, shared management where budget implementation tasks are delegated to Member States, in areas such as agricultural expenditure and structural actions. The document also presents the different financial actors involved in the budget process (accounting officers, internal officers and authorising officers) and recalls their respective roles in the context of the tasks of sound financial management. Amongst the other legal elements relating to the implementation of the EU budget presented in this document, the paper focuses on the following issues:
To recap, the final control is the discharge of the budget for a given financial year. The discharge represents the political aspect of the external control of budget implementation and is the decision by which the European Parliament, acting on a Council recommendation, "releases" the Commission from its responsibility for management of a given budget by marking the end of that budget's existence. The document also details specific expenditure of the institutions, in particular: i) pensions of former Members and officials of institutions; ii) joint sickness insurance scheme and iii) buildings. The document also presents a series of tables and detailed technical indicators on (i) the balance sheet; (ii) the economic outturn account; (iii) cashflow tables; (iv) technical annexes concerning the financial statements. 2) Balance sheet of financial implementation: achievements and difficulties in implementation: in addition to legal aspects regarding the way in which the Unions expenditures are implemented, the document highlights the difficulties relating to the management and execution of certain of the Unions expenditures. (a) Financial correction and recoveries: the document provides an overview of the correction of errors and irregularities discovered, in particular in the part of the EUs budget that is implemented by means of shared management (i.e. some 80% of the total budget). In the context of shared management, the Commission relies on Member States for the implementation of EU programmes i.e. the EU contribution is paid to the Member States, generally to a specific paying agency, which is then responsible for the payments made to beneficiaries. As a result, Member States are the primary party responsible for the prevention, detection and correction of errors and irregularities committed by the beneficiaries, while the European Commission ensures an overall supervisory role (i.e. verifying the effective functioning of Member States management and control systems). The details provided by the Commission in its consolidated document only cover financial corrections and recoveries effected at EU level. The corrections effected by Member States following their own audits are not recorded in the Commissions accounting system because Member States can reuse, in most cases, these amounts for other eligible expenditure. Member States are however requested to provide the Commission with updated information on withdrawals, recoveries and pending recoveries of Structural Funds, and to separately identify EU corrections in the reporting related to the 2007-2013 period to avoid an overlap risk.
(b) Pre-financing: pre-financing is a payment intended to provide the beneficiary with a cash advance, i.e. a float. If the beneficiary does not incur eligible expenditures, he has the obligation to return the pre-financing advance to the European Union. At 31.12.2012, total long-term pre-financings amounted to EUR 44.505 billion compared with EUR 44.723 million at the end of 2011. Pre-financing represents a large portion of the EUs total assets, and thus receives proper and regular attention. It should be noted that the level of pre-financing amounts in the various programmes must be sufficient to ensure the necessary float for the beneficiary to start the project, while also safeguarding the financial interests of the EU and taking into consideration legal, operational and cost-effectiveness constraints. The most significant non-current pre-financing amounts relate to Structural Actions for the 2007-2013 programming period: the regional development fund (ERDF) and the cohesion fund (CF) EUR 23.9 billion, the social fund (ESF) EUR 6.5 billion, the agricultural fund for rural development (EAFRD) EUR 6.1 billion and the fisheries fund (EFF) EUR 0.6 billion. As many of these projects are long-term in nature, it is necessary that the related advances are available for more than one year. (c) RAL (budgetary commitments made, payments still pending): the budgetary RAL ("Reste à Liquider")) is an amount representing the open commitments for which payments and/or de-commitments have not yet been made. At 31 December 2012, the budgetary RAL amounted to EUR 217.81 billion. (d) Borrowing and lending activities of the EU: the document also specifies that the EU is empowered by the EU Treaty to adopt borrowing programmes to mobilise the financial resources necessary to fulfil its mandate. European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM): the EFSFs mandate is to safeguard financial stability in Europe by providing financial assistance to Eurozone Member States. The EFSF does not provide new lending after 1 July 2013, in keeping with the current Framework Agreement. It is backed by guarantee commitments from the Eurozone Member States for a total of EUR 780 billion and has a lending capacity of EUR 440 billion. It is not guaranteed by the EU budget. The EFSF is a Luxembourg-registered commercial company owned by euro-area Member States outside the EU Treaty framework and thus is not an EU body and is entirely separate from and not consolidated in the EU accounts. Consequently it has no impact on the EU accounts, aside from the possible sanctions. Loans outstanding at 31.12.2012: EUR 103 900 million. European Stability Mechanism (ESM): the ESM has assumed the tasks fulfilled by the EFSM and, as from 1 July 2013, the tasks fulfilled by the EFSF becoming the sole and permanent mechanism for responding to new requests for financial assistance to Eurozone Member States. Consequently, the EFSF and the EFSM will no longer engage in new financing programmes or enter into new loan facility agreements, but will remain active in financing the on-going programmes for Portugal, Ireland and Greece. The creation of the ESM will thus not have an impact on the existing commitments under the EFSM. It must also be noted that the EU budget will not guarantee ESM borrowings. The ESM is backed by a robust capital structure, with a total subscribed capital of EUR 700 billion, of which EUR 80 billion in the form of paid-in capital provided by the Eurozone Member States. Loans outstanding at 31.12.2012: EUR 39 468 million. The document also examines the financial risks incurred by the EU and the mechanisms set in place to ensure the management of these risks. 3) Implementation of the budget for the 2012 financial year: the document also comprises a series of annexes containing figures, the most important of which relates to budgetary implementation: (a) table on the implementation of commitment appropriations by heading and rate of implementation:
Total commitments: EUR 151.284 billion; 97.55%. (b) table on the execution of payment appropriations by heading and rate of implementation:
Total payments: EUR 138.683 billion; 96.55%. (c) budget implementation conclusions: lastly, the document provides details on the implementation of the budget in more political terms. Financial year 2012 was the sixth annual budget implemented in the current MFF. For further details of the budgetary implementation of expenditures of Section III of the budget, please refer to the EU Budget 2012 Financial Report. The financial year 2012 has been another year marked by a very high execution of the budget and the financial support activities of the EU for Member States under the EFSM facility. The level of long-term advance payments (pre-financing) remains stable at EUR 44.5 billion, practically the same as in 2011. For commitments, the authorised budget, and hence the political targets set, were fully implemented (99.6%). The total level of payment appropriations was increased at the end of the year through Amending Budget 6/2012 for an amount EUR 6 billion. The shortage of payments affected nearly all headings, and in particular heading 1b Cohesion for Growth and Employment. It must also be recalled that the EUR 6 billion agreed was EUR 3 billion less that the amount requested by the Commission. Finally, the 2012 budget result of EUR 1 019 million for the Union was returned to the Member States during 2013 through deduction of their contributions due for that year. Cruising speed: the year 2012 was the sixth and penultimate year of the current programming period 2007-13. All major programmes were at cruising speed, and the inflow of payment claim increased significantly, as is normal as the cycle draws to a close. |
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Pursuant to Title VII of the Financial Regulation, the Commission presented a paper on the certification of the accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012. The paper proposes a consolidated overview of the financial statements of the EU budget with indicative tables outlining heading by heading expenditure as well as indicative and explanatory notes to the consolidated accounts. The document presents in partuclar:
The second part of the paper focuses on the implementation of the budget and refers in particular to the difficulties encountered due to the lack of payment appropriations at the end of the fiscal year. |
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FOLLOW-UP TO THE 2011 COMMISSION DISCHARGE: FOLLOW-UP TO THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL Preliminary comment: this document is the Commission's report to the European Parliament (EP) and the Council on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year, pursuant to Article 319(3) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. The Commissions responses to each of the Parliament and Councils requests are available in two Commission Staff working documents (published in SEC(2013)348 and SEC(2013)349 and attached to this procedure file). This report summarises the Commissions responses to the main requests of the European Parliament and of the Council. CONTENT: the report indicates that in the European Parliaments discharge resolution, the Commission agreed to start new actions on 181 requests (143 from the EP and 38 from the Council). For 252 other requests (205 from the EP and 47 from the Council), the required action has already been taken or is on-going, though in some cases the results of the actions will need to be assessed. Lastly, for reasons related to the existing legal and budgetary framework or its institutional role or prerogatives, the Commission cannot accept41 requests (39 from the EP3 and 2 from the Council). The Commissions responses to the requests of the EP and the Council may be summarised as follows: Priority actions: in its resolution, Parliament specifically highlights four priority actions of institutional accountability and financial nature. 1. Communication on the protection of the EU budget: the EP requested the Commission to present a Communication on the protection of the EU budget, with a view to making public all the amounts corrected and recovered in the course of the preceding year. The Communication sas to be presented in September 2013 and demonstrate that corrections and recoveries have increased considerably in the last few years. 2. Actions relating to error rates: for shared management, the EP requested the Commission to harmonise the practices concerning the interruption/suspension of payments when significant deficiencies are detected at the level of the supervisory and control systems of the Member States. The Commission indicates that interruptions and suspensions are intensively used as shown in various Commission reports and that it is its firm intention to continue using these tools. The Commission's actions in this regard have been further harmonized in 2012, in particular in the area of Cohesion policy. As regards agriculture, Commission Regulation No 883/2006 was amended in April 2013 with the objective to facilitate interruptions of Rural Development payments to the Member States already in the current programming period in case of deficiencies. However, a full harmonisation across all policy areas is not possible under the current legal framework. For the new programming period 2014-2020, the Commission's proposal for common provisions on the Funds foresees a further harmonisation of the interruption of payments for all these Funds, including Rural Development. Other technical measures were proposed to simplify national eligibility rules for the Structural Funds, avoid gold-plating and provide for joint assessment between Managing Authorities and Paying Agencies, Member States (MS) to ensure that all the rural development measures they intend to implement are verifiable and comparable. As regards the identification of so-called systemic errors, the Commission indicates that it intends to make considerable efforts to ensure strict compliance with eligibility requirements and the correct application of public procurement rules, through training and guidance to programme managing authorities who should in their turn transmit this knowledge to all bodies in charge of managing the funds. It has also shared with MS an analysis of the types of procurement errors detected by EU audits in cohesion policy during previous years. Under the same priority action, the EP also had some requests concerning three specific directorates-general (AGRI, REGIO and Research). 3. Enhanced use of performance audits: the European Parliament asked the Commission to place the emphasis on the progress made in the achievement of the (EU 2020) flagship initiatives. It also calls for an enhanced use of performance audits. The Commission has presented an action plan as part of the Evaluation report on the year 2012, which was adopted on 26 June 2013. This action plan includes actions to integrate performance information from the Strategic Planning and Programming Cycle. This includes the integration of elements of progress and performance management in the Management Plan for 2014 (setting objectives, performance indicators and associated targets per programme, evaluations planned). 4. Actions concerning revenues and traditional own resources: the EP invited the Commission to provide it with an evaluation of the cost of postponing the full application of the Modernised Customs Code (MCC) in time for the 2012 discharge procedure. It also requested the Commission to collect reliable data on the customs and VAT gap in the MS and report every six months to the EP in this regard. In this field, the Commission is providing technical assistance to certain Member States and has taken a series of actions to support Member States in their fight against tax fraud and tax evasion. On the issue of the impact of uncollected revenues on the availability of the Union Own resources, the Commission underlines that each revenue stream is characterised by a different risk profile. For traditional own resources, the Commission has repeatedly drawn Member States attention to recovery issues and strengthened awareness by applying the principle of financial responsibility if non-recovery can be attributed to a MS. As far as VAT is concerned, by far the greater financial incentive arising from effective recovery accrues to MS: for every euro collected a minimum of 97 cents goes to national budgets, while the much smaller part 3 cents flows to the EU. Horizontal issues:
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FOLLOW-UP TO THE 2011 COMMISSION DISCHARGE REPLIES TO REQUESTS FROM THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT This Commission Staff Working Paper completes the Report from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council on the Follow-up to the 2011 Discharge. An overview of these replies can be found in COM(2013)0668 (please refer to the summary of the document in question). It presents in detail the answers to 387 specific requests made by the European Parliament in its Resolutions. |
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