Progress: Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | CONT | COZZOLINO Andrea ( S&D) | MACOVEI Monica ( PPE) |
Committee Opinion | REGI | MAZZONI Erminia ( PPE) | Filiz HYUSMENOVA ( ALDE), Karin KADENBACH ( S&D) |
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 142-p2
Legal Basis:
RoP 142-p2Events
The European Parliament adopted a resolution on the protection of the Communities' financial interests and the fight against fraud – Annual Report 2008 in response to the Commission’s report on the subject. It notes that the financial impact of irregularities, as far as they have been identified, fell from EUR 1 024 million in 2007 to EUR 783.2 million in 2008, with reductions being recorded in all spending areas except direct expenditure and pre-accession funds.
Parliament stresses that all Member States must provide all necessary resources to combat fraud effectively so as to protect the financial interests of the Union and its taxpayers and to fight organised crime, which, according to national indicators, is increasing its capacity for collusion within institutions, particularly by means of fraud against the Community budget. It also calls on the Commission to take appropriate action with a view to recovering funds that are wrongly paid.
Own resources : Members welcome the fact that the estimated amount affected by irregularities was 12.5% lower than in 2007. They consider it essential to enact effective legislation to improve administrative cooperation in tackling harmful tax practices and welcome proposed legislation to deal with this. The Commission is also asked to provide comprehensive information enabling a comparison to be made between the costs incurred by Member States in collecting traditional own resources and the amount withheld to cover those collection costs.
Agricultural expenditure : Members welcome the fact that the estimated amount affected by irregularities was 34% lower than in 2007, stressing that the relatively small number of irregularities would appear to stem mainly from the higher threshold for compulsory notification (EUR 10 000) introduced under Commission Regulation (EC) No 1848/2006. They call on the Commission to take further steps to ensure effective implementation of Regulation (EC) No 1975/2006 which lays down new control rules for rural development support measures with a view to ensuring that beneficiaries meet their obligations.
Structural actions : Parliament welcomes the fact that the financial impact of irregularities was 27% lower than in 2007. It expresses concern that Italy, Poland, the UK and Spain reported the largest amount of irregularities, but welcomes the good collaboration initiated by some of these Member States with the Commission to resolve these problems and trusts that other Member States will do likewise. It goes on to note the high incidence of errors linked to ineligible spending and breaches of the rules on public procurement and considers it advisable, therefore, for the Commission to introduce precautionary guidelines to clarify how these rules are to be applied and to avoid the managing authority replacing expenditure refused by the Commission as ineligible with new expenditure that is also ineligible. Parliament also calls on Member States to supply the Commission more reliable information on financial corrections for the period 2000-2006. It calls on the Commission to be firm in requiring Member States to provide comprehensive information and meticulously to apply the financial correction rules in connection with operational programmes.
Pre-accession funds : Parliament deplores the fact that the estimated amount affected by irregularities reported by the EU-10 grew by 8%, while that for the EU-2 increased by 152%, and the amounts recovered were 15.6% down on 2007. It calls in particular on Bulgaria and Romania to build up their administrative capacity to manage EU funding, remove conflicts of interest in fund management, improve the supervision of public procurement procedures and swiftly introduce the necessary precautionary, corrective and/or disciplinary measures. The Commission is also asked to adopt a specific policy for ex-post controls under the centralised management arrangements, and to continue with initiatives to improve project design and implementation.
Direct expenditure : the resolution points out that external aid is a sector which is increasingly affected by irregularities and fraud, and it requests the Commission to pay attention to the problem of double financing of projects.
An integrated internal control framework : Members welcome the fact that the Commission’s communication on tolerable risk provided a basis for a debate on this issue, and share the view that different tolerable error thresholds may be set for each sector. It considers that the annual summaries submitted to the Commission by Member States should have a firmer legal basis than that currently in place under the Financial Regulation. Furthermore, it is essential for the Commission to continue to promote Structural Funds’ ‘contracts of confidence’ with Member States and, at the same time, secure additional guarantees in connection with national control systems by forging closer links with the independent Supreme Audit Institutions.
Increased transparency and the fight against fraud, corruption and financial crime: Parliament notes that the public procurement sector is the one most open to risks of mismanagement, and fraud. It calls on the Commission and Member States to improve current rules on public procurement. It asks the Commission to intervene to ensure that all Member States furnish reliable, uniform information on beneficiaries of EU funds which must be included in the Early Warning System and the Central Exclusion Database. The Commission is also asked to do the following:
begin early discussions with interested stakeholders on all aspects related to the creation of the European Prosecutor’s Office for combating crimes affecting the financial interests of the Union and to step up the adoption of all necessary measures for establishing this office; develop a proposal on the mutual recognition of disqualifications , in particular for professions in the financial area, such as the exclusion of fraudulent offenders from acting as chief executives; develop a proposal to extend the EU acquis on common definitions of offences in the area of financial and economic crime; consider banning companies which operate through offshore havens from making business agreements with companies residing in the EU if their offshore location will unilaterally delay the adoption of cooperation agreements with the Union; produce indicators that quantify efforts to fight corruption, paying particular attention to public procurement, in accordance with the provisions of the Stockholm Programme.
OLAF's work : Parliament takes the view that OLAF should draw more extensively on the work carried out by the Commission’s internal audit services when initiating investigations, rather than relying mainly on information provided by officials or Member States. It is also important to monitor whether and how the Commission’s internal audit service takes account of OLAF’s recommendations, and Members call on OLAF to provide relevant statistics in its future annual reports. They go on to state that OLAF’s work can be made still more effective by ensuring detailed planning of investigations, through the adoption of an ad hoc procedural regulation as a binding guide, promoting the use of SMART objectives and RACER indicators for the investigations themselves, improving cooperation between OLAF and national judicial authorities from the start of the investigative process and rapidly applying a ‘core tasks’ policy, as well as follow-up procedures during the initial stage of investigations by OLAF, under which small-scale fraud would be handled by other bodies while recurring small-scale fraud which results in large sums from irregularities due to structural problems may be of interest for OLAF investigations.
On OLAF's cooperation with Member States , Parliament deplores the shortcomings apparent in Annex I to the 2008 annual report (Implementation of Article 280 of the Treaty by the Member States in 2008) as regards both the way in which the Member States reply to the Commission’s questionnaire and the types of question asked by the Commission, which fail to elicit quantifiable answers or which Member States easily avoid. It wants OLAF to present a detailed analysis of the strategies put in place by each Member State to fight fraud, including irregularities caused by corruption. Specific attention should be paid to the implementation of agricultural and structural funds . Members consider that the report, complete with 27 country profiles, should analyse the approach followed by national judicial and investigating authorities and the quality and number of controls performed, as well as statistics and reasons in cases where the national authorities have not followed up on OLAF’s reports. The report should furnish a knowledge base to be used in better defining OLAF’s strategy and the priorities to be followed in special investigations, launching bespoke initiatives, and improving cooperation with Member States and the efficiency of both OLAF and the local supervisory authorities
Lastly, Parliament calls on the Commission to restart the procedure for the adoption of the Directive on criminal-law protection of the Communities" financial interests , blocked by the Council since 2002, and of the Regulation on mutual administrative assistance for the protection of the Communities" financial interests , blocked by the Council since 2005.
The Committee on Budgetary Control adopted the own-initiative report drawn up by Andrea COZZOLINO (S&D, IT) on the protection of the Communities' financial interests and the fight against fraud – Annual Report 2008 in response to the Commission’s report on the subject. It notes that the financial impact of irregularities, as far as they have been identified, fell from EUR 1 024 million in 2007 to EUR 783.2 million in 2008, with reductions being recorded in all spending areas except direct expenditure and pre-accession funds.
The committee stresses that all Member States must provide all necessary resources to combat fraud effectively so as to protect the financial interests of the Union and its taxpayers and to fight organised crime, which, according to national indicators, is increasing its capacity for collusion within institutions, particularly by means of fraud against the Community budget. It also calls on the Commission to take appropriate action with a view to recovering funds that are wrongly paid.
Own resources : Members welcome the fact that the estimated amount affected by irregularities was 12.5% lower than in 2007. They consider it essential to enact effective legislation to improve administrative cooperation in tackling harmful tax practices and welcome proposed legislation to deal with this. The Commission is also asked to provide comprehensive information enabling a comparison to be made between the costs incurred by Member States in collecting traditional own resources and the amount withheld to cover those collection costs.
Agricultural expenditure : Members welcome the fact that the estimated amount affected by irregularities was 34% lower than in 2007, stressing that the relatively small number of irregularities would appear to stem mainly from the higher threshold for compulsory notification (EUR 10 000) introduced under Commission Regulation (EC) No 1848/2006. They call on the Commission to take further steps to ensure effective implementation of Regulation (EC) No 1975/2006 which lays down new control rules for rural development support measures with a view to ensuring that beneficiaries meet their obligations.
Structural actions : the report welcomes the fact that the financial impact of irregularities was 27% lower than in 2007. It expresses concern that Italy, Poland, the UK and Spain reported the largest amount of irregularities, but welcomes the good collaboration initiated by some of these Member States with the Commission to resolve these problems and trusts that other Member States will do likewise. It goes on to note the high incidence of errors linked to ineligible spending and breaches of the rules on public procurement and considers it advisable, therefore, for the Commission to introduce precautionary guidelines for Member States and local authorities to clarify how these rules are to be applied and to avoid the managing authority replacing expenditure refused by the Commission as ineligible with new expenditure that is also ineligible.
Pre-accession funds : the committee deplores the fact that the estimated amount affected by irregularities reported by the EU-10 grew by 8%, while that for the EU-2 increased by 152%, and the amounts recovered were 15.6% down on 2007. It calls in particular on Bulgaria and Romania to build up their administrative capacity to manage EU funding, remove conflicts of interest in fund management, improve the supervision of public procurement procedures and swiftly introduce the necessary precautionary, corrective and/or disciplinary measures. Members call on the Commission to take appropriate steps to lessen the risks generated by the highly changeable environment in which DG ELARG operates, with a view to ensuring effective multiannual planning of internal audit operations. The Commission is also asked to adopt a specific policy for ex-post controls under the centralised management arrangements, and to continue with initiatives to improve project design and implementation.
Direct expenditure : the report points out that external aid is a sector which is increasingly affected by irregularities and fraud, and it requests the Commission to pay attention to the problem of double financing of projects.
An integrated internal control framework : Members welcome the fact that the Commission’s communication on tolerable risk provided a basis for a debate on this issue, and share the view that different tolerable error thresholds may be set for each sector. It considers that the annual summaries submitted to the Commission by Member States should have a firmer legal basis than that currently in place under the Financial Regulation. In connection with the review of the Financial Regulation, the committee calls for those summaries to provide an exhaustive qualitative analysis of the findings of the audits carried out by each Member State. Furthermore, it is essential for the Commission to continue to promote Structural Funds’ ‘contracts of confidence’ with Member States and, at the same time, secure additional guarantees in connection with national control systems by forging closer links with the independent Supreme Audit Institutions.
Increased transparency and the fight against fraud, corruption and financial crime: the report notes that the public procurement sector is the one most open to risks of mismanagement, and fraud. It calls on the Commission and Member States to improve current rules on public procurement. It asks the Commission to intervene to ensure that all Member States furnish reliable, uniform information on beneficiaries of EU funds which must be included in the Early Warning System and the Central Exclusion Database. The Commission is also asked to do the following:
begin early discussions with interested stakeholders on all aspects related to the creation of the European Prosecutor’s Office for combating crimes affecting the financial interests of the Union and to step up the adoption of all necessary measures for establishing this office; develop a proposal on the mutual recognition of disqualifications, in particular for professions in the financial area, such as the exclusion of fraudulent offenders from acting as chief executives; develop a proposal to extend the EU acquis on common definitions of offences in the area of financial and economic crime; consider banning companies which operate through offshore havens from making business agreements with companies residing in the EU if their offshore location will unilaterally delay the adoption of cooperation agreements with the Union; produce indicators that quantify efforts to fight corruption, paying particular attention to public procurement, in accordance with the provisions of the Stockholm Programme.
OLAF's work : the committee takes the view that OLAF should draw more extensively on the work carried out by the Commission’s internal audit services when initiating investigations, rather than relying mainly on information provided by officials or Member States. It is also important to monitor whether and how the Commission’s internal audit service takes account of OLAF’s recommendations, and Members call on OLAF to provide relevant statistics in its future annual reports. They go on to state that OLAF’s work can be made still more effective by ensuring detailed planning of investigations, through the adoption of an ad hoc procedural regulation as a binding guide, promoting the use of SMART objectives and RACER indicators for the investigations themselves, improving cooperation between OLAF and national judicial authorities from the start of the investigative process and rapidly applying a ‘core tasks’ policy, as well as follow-up procedures during the initial stage of investigations by OLAF, under which small-scale fraud would be handled by other bodies while recurring small-scale fraud which results in large sums from irregularities due to structural problems may be of interest for OLAF investigations.
On OLAF's cooperation with Member States , the committee deplores the shortcomings apparent in Annex I to the 2008 annual report (Implementation of Article 280 of the Treaty by the Member States in 2008) as regards both the way in which the Member States reply to the Commission’s questionnaire and the types of question asked by the Commission, which fail to elicit quantifiable answers or which Member States easily avoid. It wants OLAF to present a detailed analysis of the strategies put in place by each Member State to fight fraud, including irregularities caused by corruption. Specific attention should be paid to the implementation of agricultural and structural funds . Members consider that the report, complete with 27 country profiles, should analyse the approach followed by national judicial and investigating authorities and the quality and number of controls performed, as well as statistics and reasons in cases where the national authorities have not followed up on OLAF’s reports. The report should furnish a knowledge base to be used in better defining OLAF’s strategy and the priorities to be followed in special investigations, launching bespoke initiatives, and improving cooperation with Member States and the efficiency of both OLAF and the local supervisory authorities.
Documents
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2010)4415
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament: T7-0155/2010
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A7-0100/2010
- Committee report tabled for plenary: A7-0100/2010
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE439.320
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE438.420
- Committee opinion: PE430.762
- Committee draft report: PE430.549
- Committee draft report: PE430.549
- Committee opinion: PE430.762
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE438.420
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE439.320
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A7-0100/2010
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2010)4415
Amendments | Dossier |
62 |
2009/2167(INI)
2009/12/11
REGI
18 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1. Notes
Amendment 10 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. Takes note also that according to the European Court of Auditor's report on the implementation of the 2008 budget a major part of the estimated error rate is attributable to eligibility errors; stresses that for some of these risk errors, like eligibility issues and the breaches of public procurement rules, the Commission should not only target its own audit work at them, but also set up a preventive guidance to Member States and their regional and local authorities on how to correctly apply these rules;
Amendment 11 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 b (new) 3b. Takes note of the reply to observation 6.17 of the Court of Auditors in which the Commission states that most of the projects with high quantifiable errors are concentrated in only three Member States and urges the Commission to take appropriate remedial measures towards these Member States;
Amendment 12 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 c (new) 3c. Insists that the Commission curtails the practice highlighted by the Court of Auditors whereby Member States replace without effective ex-ante verification ineligible expenditure rejected by the Commission with new expenditure which is also ineligible;
Amendment 13 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the Commission communication of 16 December 2008 entitled, 'Towards a common understanding of the concept of tolerable risk of error' (COM(2008)0866) a
Amendment 14 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 a (new) 5a. Welcomes the improvements made by some Member States in harmonising their systems for reporting irregularities by making wider use of the AFIS; urges those Member States that have yet to introduce electronic reporting systems to do so at the earliest opportunity, given the positive impact such systems have had to date on data quality and compliance with reporting deadlines;
Amendment 15 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. Urges the Commission and the Member States to act with full responsibility and strengthen their efforts to avoid irregularities, administrative errors and failings and asks for a better demarcation between the concepts of irregularity
Amendment 16 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. Urges the Commission and the Member States to act with full responsibility and strengthen their efforts to avoid irregularities, administrative errors and failings and asks for a better demarcation between the concepts of irregularity and suspected fraud. Urges the Member States to step up judicial reform and the fight against fraud and urges the Commission to take corrective actions where irregularities are detected and to ensure that new errors do not stem from this process;
Amendment 17 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Criticises the fact that the small number of Member States that are particularly concerned are not named at an earlier stage and penalised more heavily; considers that, in the case of Member States that have come to notice on several occasions, there is an urgent need for the Commission, the Court of Auditors, OLAF and Parliament to have special inspection and control mechanisms tailored to individual countries;
Amendment 18 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 b (new) 6b. Calls on the Commission and the Court of Auditors to monitor national obligations to publicise support from the EU Structural Funds more closely; calls on the Commission in this connection to carry out more intensive checks on the legality of support under the Structural Regulations as well;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Considers the overall increase of the reported irregularities as a sign of the effort made by the Member States to improve their control systems and is confident that the new provisions established by the Structural Funds Regulations for the period 2007-2013 will help to reduce the level of irregularities in
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Considers the overall increase of the reported irregularities as a sign of the effort made by the Member States to improve their control systems and is confident that the new provisions established by the Structural Funds Regulations for the period 2007-2013 will help to reduce the level of irregularities in the next years. Notes, however, that since the assessments of the effective functioning of the management and control systems in 545 operational programmes made by the Directorates- General for Regional Policy and Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities of the Commission conclude that in 2008 only 31% of these systems worked well, and that considerable efforts by the Member States to improve the performance of their management and control systems are needed;
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Considers the overall increase of the reported irregularities as a sign of the effort made by the Member States to improve their control systems and is confident that the new provisions established by the
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Takes note of the European Court of Auditor's report on the implementation of the 2008 budget and deplores the
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Takes note of the European Court of Auditor
Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Takes note of the European Court of Auditor's report on the implementation of the 2008 budget and deplores the estimated 11 % reimbursement failure rate for cohesion policy; opines that this is partly due to the burdensome administrative procedures, particularly the conditions governing invitations to tender, and stresses that a simplification of the national and Community legislative framework governing the Structural Funds, especially as regards management and monitoring procedures, is imperative in the process of improving performances;
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Takes note of the European Court of Auditor's report on the implementation of the 2008 budget and deplores the estimated 11 % reimbursement failure rate for cohesion policy; opines that this is partly due to the burdensome administrative procedures and stresses that a simplification of the national and Community legislative framework governing the Structural Funds, especially as regards management and monitoring procedures, is imperative in the process of improving performances; is aware, however, that the European Court of Auditors' report on the implementation of the 2008 budget does not analyse the period 2007-2013, during which control mechanisms have been improved;
Amendment 9 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 a (new) source: PE-430.961
2010/02/09
BUDG
36 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Notes that the financial impact of irregularities, as far as they have been identified, fell from EUR 1 024 million in 2007 to EUR 783.2 million in 2008, with reductions being recorded in all spending areas except direct expenditure and pre- accession funds and the overall amount breaking down as follows:
Amendment 10 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 b (new) Amendment 11 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 18 a (new) 18a. Underlines the fact that the EU has been contributing more than 1 billion euros annually to the United Nations during the last five years; reiterates therefore the necessity of reinforcing OLAF’s mandate in an international context and the need to provide OLAF with all the necessary means to carry out its duties of controlling these increasing direct expenditures;
Amendment 13 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 a (new) 20a. Notes that public procurement is the area most vulnerable to mismanagement, fraud and corruption, which distort the market, increase the prices paid by consumers for goods and services, and negatively affect the confidence of citizens in the Union; notes that effective Community legislation regarding public procurement, and its trustworthy enforcement, contribute to the protection of the financial interests of the Union; calls on the Commission and Member States to design, implement and periodically evaluate uniform systems of procurement to prevent fraud and corruption, to define and implement clear conditions for participation in public procurement, and criteria on which public procurement decisions are made, and also to adopt and implement systems to review public procurement decisions at the national level, to ensure transparency and accountability in public finances, and to adopt and implement risk management and internal control systems;
Amendment 14 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 b (new) 20b. Calls on the Commission to begin early discussions and consultations with interested stakeholders, including civil society, on all aspects related to the creation of the European Prosecutor´s Office for combating crimes affecting the financial interests of the Union, as provided for in Article 86 of the TFEU, and to step up the adoption of all necessary measures for establishing this office;
Amendment 15 #
Motion for a resolution New subtitle (before paragraph 20 c) Fraud prevention and Transparency measures
Amendment 16 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 c (new) 20c. Welcomes the progress on transparency of EU funds beneficiaries; notes that the Commission should take further action to ensure one-stop transparency of the beneficiaries of EU- funds; calls on the Commission to design measures to increase the transparency of legal arrangements and a system where all beneficiaries of EU funds are published on the same website, independently of the administrator of the funds and based on standard categories of information to be provided by all Member States in at least one working language of the Union; calls on the Member States to cooperate with and provide to the Commission full and reliable information regarding the beneficiaries of the EU funds managed by Member States; invites the Commission to evaluate the system of ‘shared management’ and provide Parliament with a report;
Amendment 17 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 d (new) 20d. Calls on the Council to complete the conclusion of the Cooperation Agreements with Liechtenstein in the shortest possible time and urges the Council Presidency to give the Commission a mandate to negotiate anti- fraud agreements with Andorra, Monaco, San Marino and Switzerland;
Amendment 18 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 e (new) 20e. Calls on the Commission and Member States to include the beneficiaries of EU funds managed in partnership with the EU Member States, mainly agricultural and structural funds, into the Early Warning System and Central Exclusion Database, based on identical criteria for all Member States;
Amendment 19 #
Motion for a resolution New subtitle (before paragraph 20 f) Combating financial fraud and the fight against corruption
Amendment 2 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Stresses that combating fraud and corruption is an important duty of the European institutions and all Member States, which must provide all necessary resources to combat these scourges effectively so as to protect the financial interests of the Union and its taxpayers and to fight organised crime, which, according to national indicators, is stepping up its capacity for collusion within the institutions by means of fraud against the Community budget;
Amendment 20 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 f (new) 20f. Notes that 78 % of Union citizens agree that corruption is a major concern in their country and that 76 % of the Union citizens agree that there is corruption within the institutions of the EU (Eurobarometer, 2009); calls on the Commission, the relevant Union agencies and the Member States to take measures and provide resources to ensure that EU funds are not subject to corruption, to adopt dissuasive sanctions where corruption and fraud are found, to step up the confiscation of criminal assets involved in fraud, tax evasion and money- laundering related crimes, and to apply clear and transparent rules with regard to politically-exposed persons, as defined in the Third Money Laundering Directive (Directive 2005/60/EC); welcomes the invitation from the European Council on the Stockholm Programme to the Commission to develop indicators to precisely quantify the efforts in the fight against corruption, in particular in the areas of public procurement and financial control, and calls on the Commission to act upon it as a matter of priority;
Amendment 21 #
Motion for a resolution New Subtitle (before paragraph 20 g) Reinforced fight against financial and economic crime
Amendment 22 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 g (new) 20g. Emphasises that the active protection of the EU’s financial interests requires a reinforced fight against financial and economic crime; calls on the Member States to fully implement the relevant Union instruments, including the 2000 Mutual Legal Assistance Convention and its Protocol on banking transactions, the Framework Decision on confiscation orders (2006/783/JHA) and the Framework Decision on Financial Penalties (2005/214/JHA);
Amendment 23 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 h (new) 20h. Calls on the Commission to develop a proposal on the mutual recognition of disqualifications, in particular for professions in the financial area, such as the exclusion of fraudulent offenders from acting as chief executives;
Amendment 24 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 i (new) 20i. Calls on the Commission to develop an impact assessment and a proposal to extend the EU acquis on common definitions of offences in the area of financial and economic crime;
Amendment 25 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 j (new) 20j. Calls on the Commission and Member States to enhance their capacity for financial investigation and combine all available instruments in fiscal, civil and criminal law; calls for stronger cooperation between Asset Recovery Offices, so that the confiscation of assets becomes more efficient;
Amendment 26 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 k (new) 20k. Considers that stopping tax evasion and illicit activities that go through offshore havens is necessary in order to protect the financial interests of the Union; calls on the Commission to consider banning companies which operate through offshore havens from making business agreements with companies residing in the European Union if their offshore location will unilaterally delay the adoption of cooperation agreements with the Union;
Amendment 27 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21. Acknowledges and voices its support for OLAF's work and the need to ensure its full independence from the Commission in the performance of its tasks, which it sees as playing an essential role in protecting the financial interests of the European Union and, thereby, EU citizens, as well as a major role in upholding the reputation of the European institutions; considers, therefore, that a human resources strategy which raises staffing levels and ensures that the current high staff quality standards are maintained should be drawn up;
Amendment 28 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21. Acknowledges and voices its support for OLAF’s work, which it sees as playing an essential role in protecting the financial interests of the European Union and, thereby, EU citizens, as well as a major role in upholding the reputation of the European institutions; considers, therefore, that a human resources strategy which
Amendment 29 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Considers that OLAF's work can be made still more effective by ensuring careful and detailed planning of investigations, through the adoption of an ad hoc procedural regulation as a binding guide, promoting the use of SMART objectives and RACER indicators for the investigations themselves, improving cooperation and data exchange between OLAF and national judicial authorities from the start of the investigative process and introducing a 'core tasks' policy for OLAF, under which small-scale fraud would be handled by other bodies; calls on OLAF therefore to outline in its next report the progress that has been made in this respect and to say to what extent account has been taken thereof in the OLAF operational manual that is to be published in the near future
Amendment 3 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Regrets the fact that a large amount of EU funds remains wrongly paid, and calls on the Commission to take appropriate action with regard to recovering those funds;
Amendment 30 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Considers that OLAF's work can be made still more effective by ensuring careful and detailed planning of investigations, promoting the use of SMART objectives and RACER indicators for the investigations themselves, improving cooperation and data exchange
Amendment 31 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Considers that OLAF’s work can be made still more effective by ensuring careful and detailed planning of investigations, promoting the use of SMART objectives and RACER indicators for the investigations themselves, improving cooperation and data exchange between OLAF and national judicial authorities from the start of the investigative process and introducing a ‘core tasks’ policy for OLAF, under which small-scale fraud would be handled by other bodies while recurring small-scale fraud which results in large sums from irregularities due to structural problems may be of interest for OLAF investigations; calls on OLAF therefore to outline in its next report the progress that has been made in this respect and to say to what extent account has been taken thereof in the OLAF operational manual that is to be published in the near future;
Amendment 32 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 a (new) 23a. Calls on the Commission to actively include OLAF in the negotiation of all Cooperation Agreements that deal with the combating of fraud and with the exchange of information on tax matters;
Amendment 33 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 a (new) 26a. Calls on OLAF to present, in its future annual report, a detailed analysis of the strategies and measures put in place by each Member State in the fight against fraud and for preventing and identifying irregularities in the expenditure of European funds, including where they are caused by corruption; considers that specific attention should be paid to the implementation of agricultural and structural funds; takes the view that the report, with 27 country profiles, should analyse the approach followed by national judicial and investigating bodies and the quantity and quality of controls performed, as well as statistics and reasons in the cases where national authorities did not file indictments following reports by OLAF; considers, therefore, that the report should provide a knowledge basis for better defining OLAF’s strategy and improving cooperation with the Member States and the efficiency of both OLAF and national investigative authorities;
Amendment 34 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 b (new) 26b. Notes that Community legislation requires Member States to report all irregularities no later than two months after the end of the quarter in which an irregularity has been subject to a primary administrative or judicial finding and/or new information about a reported irregularity becomes known; calls on the Member States to make all the necessary efforts, including the streamlining of national administrative procedures, to meet the required deadlines and reduce the time gap between the moment a irregularity is identified and that when it is reported; calls on the Member States to act primarily as a protector of taxpayers’ money in their efforts to combat fraud;
Amendment 35 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 c (new) 26c. Calls on the Commission to restart the procedure for the adoption of the Directive on criminal-law protection of the Communities’ financial interests (2001/0115(COD)), blocked by the Council since 2002, and of the Regulation on mutual administrative assistance for the protection of the Communities’ financial interests (2004/0172 (COD)), blocked by the Council since 2005;
Amendment 36 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 6 a (new) Amendment 4 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 a (new) 7a. Emphasises that the reporting obligations need to be enforced among all Member States; considers that agricultural subsidy beneficiary databases should be reported in the official working languages of the European Community institutions (French, English and German) to provide transparency;
Amendment 5 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Welcomes the fact that the financial impact of irregularities, as estimated by the
Amendment 6 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 12. Stresses that delays in the approval of management and control systems for the 2007-2013 programmes may have made it more difficult to detect errors and possible fraud in expenditure on advances; considers furthermore that the resulting delays in spending on interim payments could give rise to a rush to spend just before the decommitment deadline is reached; urges the Commission to consider revising the decommitment rules with a view to improving the quality of spending and
Amendment 7 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Welcomes the Commission's introduction of a joint fraud prevention strategy for structural measures, which was drafted in cooperation with OLAF and stresses the importance of more effective cooperation with the regional authorities and national judicial authorities which are competent;
Amendment 8 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Deplores the fact that the estimated amount affected by irregularities reported by the EU-10 grew by 8%, while that for the EU-2 increased by 152%, and the amounts recovered were 15.6% down on 2007; calls
Amendment 9 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 a (new) 16a. Emphasises that the strategic objectives for pre-accession funds must be defined further for example in the case of Turkey, to facilitate easier evaluation of conducted projects in relation to the overall goals; considers that the objectives and results must be communicated in a transparent manner;
source: PE-438.420
2010/03/01
CONT
8 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Welcomes the fact that the financial impact of irregularities, as estimated by the Commission, was 27% lower than in 2007; notes, with regard to the legality and regularity of underlying transactions, that the error rate quoted for the cohesion policy area in the Court of Auditors' 2008 Statement of Assurance (DAS) remains above 5%; deplores the fact that Italy, Poland, the United Kingdom and Spain reported the largest amount of irregularities;
Amendment 2 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Welcomes the fact that the Commission's communication on tolerable risk (COM(2008)0866) provided a basis for a debate on this issue, and calls on the Commission to keep it abreast of developments in this area; endorses the proposal that different tolerable error thresholds be set for each sector, taking their respective characteristics and rules into account; agrees to a tolerable error threshold of 5% for the Structural Funds, recommending however that a higher tolerance level be accepted for innovative projects on account of their experimental nature; urges the Commission to take due account of the other steps that need to be taken to improve the management of EU funds (e.g.: making control systems more effective and gearing them to spending quality; simplifying the relevant legislation);
Amendment 3 #
Motion for a resolution New subtitle (before paragraph 20a) Increased transparency and the fight against fraud, corruption and financial crime
Amendment 4 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 a (new) 20a. Notes that the public procurement sector is the one most open to risks of mismanagement, fraud and corruption and that such unlawful activities distort the market, increase the prices and fees paid by consumers for goods and services and spread mistrust within the European Union; calls, therefore, on the Commission and the Member States to consider the current rules on public procurement carefully and make proposals for their improvement; acknowledges too that progress has been made towards greater transparency concerning the beneficiaries of EU funds and calls on the Commission to develop a system whereby lists of beneficiaries are published on the same website, irrespective of the managing authority concerned, giving clear, comparable information from all the Member States in at least one of the EU’s working languages; asks the Commission moreover to intervene to ensure that all Member States furnish reliable, uniform information on beneficiaries of EU funds which must be included in the Early Warning System and the Central Exclusion Database;
Amendment 5 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 e (new) 20e. Calls on the Commission and the Member States to commit themselves to guaranteeing the resources necessary to prevent spending from EU funds being corrupt, to speed up the confiscation of criminal assets implicated in the perpetration of fraud, tax evasion, money laundering and related crimes, and to apply clear and transparent rules in respect of politically exposed persons, in accordance with the Third Money Laundering Directive (Directive 2005/60/EC); calls on the Commission to produce indicators as swiftly as possible that quantify efforts to fight corruption, paying particular attention to public procurement, in accordance with the provisions of the Stockholm Programme; calls for greater cooperation between the Asset Recovery Offices so that the confiscation of assets becomes efficient; calls on the Commission to take steps immediately to promote good governance in tax matters, in accordance with Parliament’s resolution of 10 February 2010 on the subject, and particularly as regards the problem of tax havens;
Amendment 6 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 26.
Amendment 7 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 b 20b. Stresses the fact that under EU legislation Member States are required to report all irregularities no later than two months after the end of the quarter in which the irregularity was the subject of an administrative or judicial preliminary investigation and/or in which new information on a previously reported irregularity was made known; calls, therefore, on the Member States to make every effort to reduce the time gap between when an irregularity is noticed and when it is reported, including streamlining national administrative procedures;
Amendment 8 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Deplores the fact that the estimated amount affected by irregularities reported by the EU-10 grew by 8%, while that for the EU-2 increased by 152%, and the amounts recovered were 15.6% down on 2007; calls in particular on Bulgaria and Romania to build up their administrative capacity to manage EU funding, remove existing or potential conflicts of interest in fund management, improve the supervision and transparency of public procurement procedures at central, regional and local levels and swiftly introduce and notify to the Commission the necessary precautionary, corrective and/or disciplinary measures; acknowledges and supports the steps taken by Bulgaria and Romania to improve shared management and financial control standards in response to the Commission’s recommendations; stresses the importance of an independent administrative and judicial system and urges a strong political commitment in this regard and the utmost determination in order to achieve new and tangible results;
source: PE-439.320
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