Next
year’s budget - the first of the 2021-2027 financing period - should
“promote fair, inclusive and sustainable growth, high-quality
job-creation and its long-term goal of socioeconomic convergence”, MEPs
state in their draft resolution, which reflects and accompanies the outcome of the vote on budgetary figures of 15 October.
They have set the overall level of the
2021 EU budget at just under € 182 billion in commitment appropriations,
representing an increase of € 15 billion compared to the Commission’s proposal. Most of these increases will benefit the EU’s 15 flagship programmes,
boosting many programmes and projects that will support the young,
researchers, health workers, entrepreneurs, and many other citizens.
Other major additions to next year’s
budget were voted on in areas such as climate change, energy, digital
and transport interconnectivity, SMEs, tourism, security, migration,
fundamental rights, and external action. MEPs also aim to achieve a
biodiversity spending level of 10% and a climate mainstreaming spending
level of 30% for 2021.
Details about the different headings, programmes and projects can be found in the draft resolution.
The resolution prepared by the General
Rapporteur for the Commission’s budget, Pierre Larrouturou (S&D,
FR), and the rapporteur for the other institutions’ administrative
budget, Mr Olivier Chastel (RENEW, BE), was adopted with 35 votes to 2
and 4 abstentions.
Next steps
The resolution and the budgetary
amendments will be debated and voted on during the November I plenary
sitting (11-12 November 2020).
This will kick off three weeks of
“conciliation” talks with the Council, with the aim of reaching a deal
between the two institutions in time for next year’s budget, to be voted
on by Parliament and signed by its President in December.
The first conciliation meeting between the Council and the Parliament is scheduled for 19 November.
Background
The preparations and negotiations of the
European Union’s 2021 budget are taking place under unusual
circumstances as there is still no political agreement on the MFF, which
serves as the basis for the annual budgets.
The calendar for this year’s annual budgetary procedure is here.
In case the new MFF is not in place in time for 2021, MEPs have asked the Commission to propose an MFF contingency plan in order to protect beneficiaries of EU programmes and ensure continuity of funding.
About 93% of the EU budget funds real
activities in EU countries and beyond. It goes to citizens, regions,
cities, farmers, researchers, students, NGOs, and businesses.
The EU budget is unique. Unlike national
budgets, which are largely used to provide public services and fund
social security systems, the EU budget is primarily an investment budget
and, unlike national budgets, the EU budget cannot run a deficit.