IP/08/573
Brussels, 15 April 2008
EU budget: smallest surplus
ever
In 2007, Member States' contributions to the
European Union budget almost exactly matched the agreed spending for the year so
that there was the smallest EU budget surplus ever with a 90% drop from 2000 and
a steady 17% decrease from 2006. The continued downward trend reflects the
European Commission's efforts to ensure Member States' payments to EU coffers
are limited to what is strictly necessary. The end-of-year surplus - the
difference between all EU budget revenue and spending - amounted to only just
over 1% (€1 529 million) of the total €113.846 billion agreed
spending for 2007.
"The amount that Member States were asked to pay to the EU budget in 2007
corresponded very closely to what was spent. This is good news" said Dalia
Grybauskaitė, EU Commissioner for Financial Programming and Budget. She
added, "Effective forward planning, less red-tape and good budgetary management
made it easier to get new programmes rolling faster in 2007, helping Member
States direct EU cash to where agreed needs lie".
Thanks to the financial management reforms introduced over the past years,
budget surpluses have fallen dramatically since their peak in 2001. Crucial to
the level of the surplus is the implementation of voted budget payments as they
make up most of the EU's spending. And even though the year 2007 – like
2000 - was the first year of a new Financial Framework, the implementation rate
of payments still reached 99%, contributing, among other things, to a record low
surplus.
Evolution of EU budget surplus
[ Figures and graphics available in PDF and WORD PROCESSED ]
Surplus returned to Member States:
Since EU rules set out that the EU budget must be balanced over the year, any
extra cash is returned to Member States. The following table provides the
figures of funds returned per Member State. The amount is calculated on the
basis of each country's Gross National Income (GNI).
|
€ million1
|
|
|
|
Member State
|
Surplus of the 2007 budget
|
|
|
|
|
Belgium
|
42
|
|
Bulgaria
|
4
|
|
Czech Republic
|
15
|
|
Denmark
|
29
|
|
Germany
|
300
|
|
Estonia
|
2
|
|
Ireland
|
21
|
|
Greece
|
26
|
|
Spain
|
131
|
|
France
|
234
|
|
Italy
|
191
|
|
Cyprus
|
2
|
|
Latvia
|
3
|
|
Lithuania
|
3
|
|
Luxembourg
|
4
|
|
Hungary
|
12
|
|
Malta
|
1
|
|
Netherlands
|
70
|
|
Austria
|
33
|
|
Poland
|
38
|
|
Portugal
|
19
|
|
Romania
|
16
|
|
Slovenia
|
4
|
|
Slovak Republic
|
7
|
|
Finland
|
22
|
|
Sweden
|
42
|
|
United Kingdom
|
258
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
1 529
|
|
|
|
(1) rounded figures
|
|