Economy
EU budget: First 2014, then 2015, say Budgets Committee MEPs
Giving the European Union a budget must take priority over redistributing resources to member states, said Budgets Committee MEPs on Tuesday (11 November), after a third fruitless effort to engage the Council of Ministers in budgetary negotiations within the official deadline. MEPs want the most urgent bills for 2014 to be settled before discussing the 2015 budget, but the Council has yet to agree even on the first budget top up, proposed by the European Commission as long ago as May.
"It is shocking that Council has devoted no time to discussing how outstanding bills for this year should be paid or how next year’s budget should look, given that citizens are increasingly disillusioned with how Europe manages its affairs. It has only discussed the GNI issue, which does not affect the budget," said Budgets Committee Chairman Jean Arthuis (ALDE, FR), referring to the outcome of Council's 7 November meeting.
"Parliament has a clear and transparent position and has been awaiting the Council’s response. Yet the Council has failed to take a stance and we have only three days left to conclude. This shows a lack of respect for EU citizens who are the final beneficiaries of the budget," he added.
First 2014, then 2015
Parliament first wants to know how unpaid bills will be paid in 2014, before negotiating fresh funding for member state projects in 2015.
The sum of unpaid bills at the year’s end grows year after year because there is ever less money left to meet them. In 2010, unpaid bills amounted to €5 billion, rising to €23.4bn for 2014 and a forecast €28bn by the end of this year. As a result, small and medium sized enterprises, students, researchers, NGOs in the humanitarian sector as well as municipalities have to wait for money to which they are perfectly entitled.
"At the start of this new legislature we have to stop the growth of unpaid bills. This year’s unforeseen resources from fines of €5bn must go to settle the most urgent ones", said Arthuis, referring to windfall revenues from competition-related fines. “We are not fanatics - we are simply asking the Council to pay what it promised,” he added.
To enable Parliament and the Council to close the budget negotiations on time and table means both to stop the growth of unpaid bills and to finance new programmes, Budgets Committee MEPs called on the Council to present its stance by late Thursday morning, so as to allow discussion and deliver an agreement by the Friday deadline.
Background
The EU budget is proposed by the European Commission and decided upon by the European Parliament and the Council in negotiations lasting 21 days. The outcome must be approved by both institutions before the Parliament’s President can sign the budget.
Share this article:
EU Reporter publishes articles from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these articles are not necessarily those of EU Reporter. Please see EU Reporter’s full Terms and Conditions of publication for more information EU Reporter embraces artificial intelligence as a tool to enhance journalistic quality, efficiency, and accessibility, while maintaining strict human editorial oversight, ethical standards, and transparency in all AI-assisted content. Please see EU Reporter’s full A.I. Policy for more information.
-
Brexit4 days agoStepping out...to get the UK back in European Union
-
Gender equality4 days agoEurope must not turn its back on rural women’s empowerment
-
Animal welfare4 days agoCommission accelerates transition away from animal testing in chemical safety assessments
-
Health2 days agoCounterfeit cigarettes drive illicit tobacco trade to highest level in a decade, new study claims
