MEMO/07/350
Brussels, 12 September 2007
EU Budget – facts and
myths
Myth 1: "EU Budget is decided undemocratically by eurocrats in Brussels
and spent without any control"
NOT TRUE
This is the Council of Ministers (representing Member States' governments)
and the European Parliament that decide the EU budget. The process is fully
democratic and transparent – starting from the Commission making its
proposal of the preliminary draft budget in April/May each year to the final
agreement of the Council and the Parliament in November/December.
As much as 76% of the EU expenditure is managed by Member States themselves
(under so-called shared management). It is up to the European Parliament,
following the judgement of the Court of Auditors and on the recommendation of
the Council, to decide whether the Commission has managed EU funds
correctly.
All EU institutions together (the Council, the European Parliament, the
Commission, the Court of Justice, the Court of Auditors, European Economic and
Social Committee, Committee of the Regions etc.) "cost" around EUR 5.5 cents per
each Euro spent from the EU budget.
Myth 2: "The size of EU budget exploded because of the recent
enlargement to Eastern-Central Europe"
NOT TRUE
The relative size of the EU budget decreased substantially in the recent
years: from 1,05% of EU Gross National Income (GNI) on average over the period
1993-1999 to only 0,94% of EU GNI on average over 2000-2006.
1n 2005, the last year for which data are available at this stage, the
countries that joined in 2004 were allocated EUR 9,1 billion or 9,4% of the
total for the EU-25.
Myth 3: "The structure of the EU budget has not changed in the last
twenty years and most of the money is wasted on the CAP"
NOT TRUE
In the first year of the first ever EU financial framework (1988-1992), the
agriculture expenditure represented nearly 61% of the budget. By 2013, the share
of traditional CAP spending (excluding rural development) will have almost
halved (32%), following a decrease in real terms in the current financing
period.
The amounts earmarked for structural action represented 17% of the EU
budget in 1988. They will more than double to reach almost 36% in 2013.
Funding for other policies (mainly related to competitiveness, external
actions and rural development) was originally very limited – they
represented around 7% twenty years ago. The new emphasis on economic development
and competitiveness will see the share of such policies rise to 26% of EU
spending in 2013.
Myth 4: "Each citizen has to contribute over EUR 1000 annually to the
EU coffers"
NOT TRUE
The executed EU budget for 2006 was EUR 106.6 billion, which is around 2.1%
of EU public expenditure. It represents around EUR 63 cents per day (not even a
cup of coffee in most of the Member States) for each of the then 464 million
inhabitants of EU-25. For the whole 2006 this was EUR 230 per EU citizen.
Myth 5: "There is no real accountability in the budget"
NOT TRUE
The Court of Auditors has given last year, as it did in previous years, a
clean bill of health on the EU accounts. The Court confirms these accounts
faithfully reflect how the EU budget was spent.
The Court also gives a separate opinion on whether all payments have been
correctly processed, i.e. paid on time, the invoice properly signed, amounts
paid correctly, whether the best and cheapest suppliers have been chosen, etc.
The Court says it can only give positive assurance on some spending, not on the
whole budget, as it has found errors in some of the payments under scrutiny.
Most of the errors found by the Court concerned EU funds under national
management.
Myth 6: "The EU accounts do not meet national standards in Member
States"
NOT TRUE
The EU test is much more rigorous than that of the private sector, where only
book-keeping records are audited.
Sir John Bourn, the UK’s Comptroller & Auditor, has recently
confirmed that if the UK had a similar test to the European one, he
might have to qualify the whole of British Central Government expenditure. In
the UK some 500 accounts representing the expenditure of the British government
are audited and signed off separately, with some not passing the test each year,
whereas the whole of EU expenditure is subject to a single verdict.
Many experts say that the unique way the audit process for the EU accounts
has been designed in the treaties, and the resulting current Court of
Auditors’ methodology, do not ever allow a clean bill of health for all
payments.