The European Commission welcomes the European Parliament's vote today, confirming the political agreement reached on the RRF Regulation in December 2020. This marks an important step towards making €672.5 billion in loans and grants available to Member States to support reforms and investments.
The European Commission welcomes the European Parliament's vote today, confirming the political agreement reached on the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF)
Regulation in December 2020. This marks an important step towards
making €672.5 billion in loans and grants available to Member States to
support reforms and investments.
The RRF is the key instrument at the heart of NextGenerationEU, the
EU's plan for emerging stronger from the COVID-19 pandemic. It will play
a crucial role in helping Europe recover from the economic and social
impact of the pandemic and will help to make the EU's economies and
societies more resilient and secure the green and digital transitions.
Recovery and resilience plans
The approval of the European Parliament paves the way for the RRF to
come into force in the second half of February. Member States will then
be able to officially submit their national recovery and resilience
plans, which will be assessed by the Commission and adopted by the
Council. The recovery and resilience plans set out the reforms and
public investment projects that will be supported by the RRF. The
Commission is already engaged in intensive dialogue with all Member
States on the preparation of these plans.
Pre-financing of 13% of the total amount allocated to Member States
will be made available once recovery and resilience plans are approved,
to ensure that RRF financing arrives where it is needed as quickly as
possible.
Structure and objectives of the Recovery and Resilience Facility
The RRF is structured around six pillars: green transition; digital
transformation; economic cohesion, productivity and competitiveness;
social and territorial cohesion; health, economic, social and
institutional resilience; policies for the next generation.
It will help the EU achieve its target of climate neutrality by 2050
and set it on a path of digital transition, creating jobs and spurring
growth in the process. A minimum of 37% of expenditure on investments
and reforms contained in each national recovery and resilience plan
should support climate objectives. A minimum of 20% of expenditure on
investments and reforms contained in each national plan should support
the digital transition.
It will also help Member States effectively address the challenges
identified in relevant country-specific recommendations under the
European Semester framework of economic and social policy coordination.
Next steps
The Council now also needs to formally approve the agreement reached,
before the Presidents of the ECOFIN Council and the European Parliament
can sign it. The Regulation will then be published in the Official
Journal, allowing it to enter into force on the day after publication.
The Commission expects all the necessary formal steps to be concluded in
time for the RRF to enter into force in the second half of February.
Members of the College said:
President Ursula von der Leyen said: “Defeating
the virus thanks to vaccines is essential. But we also need to help
citizens, businesses and communities exit the economic crisis. The
Recovery and Resilience Facility will bring €672.5 billion to do just
that. It will invest in making Europe greener, more digital, more
resilient, for everyone's long term benefit. I welcome the positive vote
by the European Parliament as an important step towards activating the
Recovery and Resilience Facility.”
Valdis Dombrovskis, Executive Vice-President for an Economy that Works for People, said: “This
Facility provides EU countries with a unique chance to rebuild and
revamp their economies for the post-COVID world. It is an opportunity
build resilience and to embrace a more digital and greener future. That
requires both the right investments and the right reforms. To recover
from the crisis and meet the challenges of the 21st century,
Member States should seize the opportunity of the RRF funding to free
their economies of bottlenecks and refresh outdated policies and
practices. We call on Member States to continue working closely with the
Commission on compiling robust and credible recovery and resilience
plans so we can start disbursing the funding as soon as possible. I
thank the European Parliament for its support and the speed with which
it has approved the RRF.”
Paolo Gentiloni, Commissioner for Economy, said: “Today's
vote in the European Parliament brings us a step closer to the Recovery
and Resilience Facility entering into force. Driven by the terrible
shock of the pandemic, Europe has taken a historic step. We have done
something that was unthinkable just one year ago: the creation of a
common instrument, funded by common debt, to achieve a common goal. For
several months the Commission has been working hard with governments as
they draw up their recovery and resilience plans. Now we must all
intensify our efforts and make sure we seize this unique opportunity to
change our economies, for the common good of all Europeans.”
For More Information
Recovery and Resilience Facility: Questions and Answers
Factsheet on the Recovery and Resilience Facility
Recovery and Resilience Facility Regulation (as tabled for the EP plenary)
Recovery and Resilience Facility website
European Commission
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