- Budget Committee MEPs adopt negotiating position for EU’s next long-term 2021-2027 budget
- Do more for youth, research, growth & jobs and tackle climate change
- Make the EU fit for new challenges like migration, defence, security
- Funding for long-standing farming and cohesion policies should not be reduced
Budget
Committee MEPs in a vote on Monday confirmed their position to
negotiate the next EU long-term budget with EU Ministers, including
figures for each EU programme.
Members
of the Committee on Budgets underline Parliament’s “unity and
readiness” for the upcoming post-2020 multiannual financial framework
(MFF) negotiations with EU Ministers
and regret that member states have made “no significant progress” on
finding a common position.
They consider that the
MFF proposal tabled by the European Commission is a starting point,
but its proposed level “will not allow the EU to deliver on its
political commitments and respond to the important challenges ahead”.
They thus propose to plenary to confirm the following
priorities, when the full house votes on 14 November (list not
exhaustive):
- Set the budget for the Horizon Europe research programme at €120 billion (Commission: €83.5 billion);
- Continue and boost the investment plan for Europe (“Juncker Plan”);
- Increase funding for transport infrastructure and SMEs;
- Maintain the financing of the long-standing cohesion and agricultural policies;
- Double the resources for tackling youth unemployment, triple the resources for Erasmus+;
- Set the EU’s contribution to the climate objectives target at a minimum of 25% of MFF expenditure.
A new and simpler system of revenues
As
to reforming the EU’s sources of revenue (“own resources”), MEPs stress
that the current system is “highly complex, unfair and non-transparent
and totally incomprehensible
to the EU’s citizens”.
A
new, simpler system should bring a substantial reduction to the gross
national income-based direct contributions from member states and
guarantee an adequate financing of
EU spending under the new MFF.
MEPs
demand the introduction of new own resources, such as one based on a
new corporate tax scheme (including taxation of large companies in the
digital sector), on revenues
from the Emissions Trading System and on a plastic tax.
They
stress that revenue and expenditure should be treated as a single
package; thus all elements of the MFF/Own Resources package, and notably
the MFF figures, should remain
on the negotiating table until a final agreement is reached.
The draft interim report on the 2021-2027 MFF– Parliament’s position with a view to an agreement – by co-rapporteurs
Jan Olbrycht (EPP, PL),
Isabelle Thomas (S&D, FR),
Gérard Deprez (ALDE, BE) and
Janusz Lewandowski (EPP, PL) has been adopted with 25 votes in favour, 5 against and no abstention.
Next steps
Once
this position is confirmed by plenary (vote on 14 November), Parliament
is ready to negotiate, and talks can begin as soon as Council has
agreed on a common position.
The adoption of a new MFF Regulation requires Parliament’s consent.
MEPs
expect “that a good agreement will be reached before the 2019 European
Parliament elections, in order to avoid the serious setbacks for the
launch of the new programmes
due to the late adoption of the financial framework, as experienced in
the past.”
Background
Over
94% of the EU budget goes to citizens, regions, cities, farmers and
businesses. The EU's administrative expenses account for under 6% of the
total. (Source:
European Commission)
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