North West
Conservative Euro MP David Sumberg is expressing grave concern after the
European Court of Auditors refused to sign off the European Commission (EC)
accounts for the 13th successive year.
Mr
Sumberg said it is totally unacceptable that errors of legality and
regularity still persist in the majority of the EC's 106bn euro annual
budget (£75bn). According to the court of auditors report much of the
misspending is caused by poor knowledge of complex rules and presumes that
fraud also exists.
Mr Sumberg
says: "Hard working North West families will be alarmed and appalled that
such an enormous sum of taxpayers cash, including their own, is so
shockingly administered by a public body as powerful as the EC,' he said.
"The fact that this is the 13th year running that the EC's accounts have not
been signed off by the auditors is unacceptable. A full and thorough inquiry
is urgently required to ensure it never happens again. If the EC was a
private company its directors would have been disqualified and thrown in
jail years ago.”
Mr Sumberg
said it is essential for the British Government to demand the accounts are
sorted out as a matter of urgency.
BACKGROUND
-
The think tank Open
Europe has calculated that the areas of expenditure on which the Court
has given an adverse opinion account for 57% of the overall budget - or
£43.4 billion. This means that of the £10.5 billion given by UK
taxpayers to the EU each year, nearly £6 billion is open to fraud.
-
In its
report the European Court of Auditors dismissed the European
Commission's attempt to blame national government's for the majority of
EU fraud saying, "Regardless
of the method of implementation applied, the Commission bears the
ultimate responsibility for the legality and regularity of the
transactions underlying the accounts of the European Communities
(Article 274 of the Treaty)"
The long line of examples of EU fraud:
· In
a report earlier this year the ECA found that over half of EU funded
projects in Romania and Bulgaria “are not operating as intended”. Failed
projects include a virtually unused asylum-seekers’ centre costing £1
million, a £2 million bridge which cannot be used because there is no access
road at one end, and £200,000 border-control police boats rendered useless
by cold weather. (Express, 31.08.07)
·
Another ECA report found that 4 million pounds was given to a children’s
cancer centre in Avellino in 1992, which has yet to install a single bed.
Work began on another hospital near Naples in 1965 and after decades of
delay a decision was taken to finish it in 2001. Inspectors later found out
that the mafia was using it as a weapons store. (Telegraph, 5.09.06)
· In the Liberec
region in the Czech Republic, the Mayor forged documents and altered a
building permit he needed for a project worth some 2 million euros, which he
received from the structural funds. Once caught this summer, he had already
spent everything (Czech News Agency, August 10, 2007).
· The EU paid out some 50 million euros during the period 2001-2004
to farmers in southern Italy, for buying and selling surpluses of citrus
under the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy.
However, neither the farmers, nor the fruit nor the buyers actually existed
(Svenska Dagbladet, 23 April 2007).
Agriculture:
The EU spent 49.8 billion euros funding agriculture in 2006, 15 billion
euros of which was not subject to proper checks. The Court found that "one
quarter of the payments tested at final beneficiary level revealed
overpayments".
Nearly a quarter of olive growers in Italy, Spain and Greece had declared at
least 5% more olive trees than they owned, in some cases netting
"significant" extra EU cash.
Greece came in for particular criticism as many of the much needed financial
controls have still not been put in place - meaning that 850 million euros
per year is paid to Greek farmers under "unsatisfactory control
conditions". They also found that some 50% of Greek sultana producers
should not have qualified for the subsidies they were receiving.
There were extremely high levels of error in the rural development budget -
aimed at funding environmental developments for farmers. Of the eight cases
the ECA audited, in seven of them the farmers had not met the necessary
commitments to qualify for the grants.
It also found that the recent changes to payments for farmers - from
subsidising production to giving subsidies based on the amount of land owned
- have "side effects, such as the allocation of entitlements to landowners
who never exercised previous agricultural activity, leading to a substantial
redistribution of EU aid away from farmers to landlords. Among new
beneficiaries for EU agricultural aid are railway companies, horse riding or
breeding clubs and golf or leisure clubs and city councils."
The ECA criticised the way in which the UK implemented the reforms, finding
that landowners who were renting out their lands were able to claim
subsidies despite the fact they were not actually farming the land: "In
Northern Ireland, for example, more than 176 000 entitlements (worth 13,8
million euro) were allocated to such landlords". It also found an instance
of two farmers in Scotland claiming subsidies worth hundreds of thousands of
pounds off the same piece of land. It also found that farmers were buying
very poor quality land but were still receiving the average regional subsidy
price - effectively buying land to claim subsidies.
It criticised the Commission's oversight of national agencies that make the
payments to farmers, such as the Rural Payments Agency in the UK. For
example, it found that the last time the EU Commission updated its records
on how much money member states owed the EU budget in fines and corrections
for inflated claims was 1998. The report stated, "These involve significant
sums of money being repaid to the Community budget... It should be
emphasised that these recoveries to the Community budget are funded by
national taxpayers, rather than the beneficiaries who have received
Community funds irregularly."
Structural funds:
Structural funding accounted for €32.4 billion of the EU's 2006 budget. The
ECA noticed little improvement here, stating that "the situation remains
similar to previous years". Of the projects it audited only 31% "were found
to be free from error". It warned that there was a "high risk" that the
project costs were "overstated" and that there were large numbers of claims
for "ineligible expenditure." The report states that there was generally "a
lack of evidence to support the calculation of overheads or the staff costs
involved." As well as criticising the Member States' control of these funds
it also criticised the EU Commission's supervision of how the funding was
spent. It found that at least 4 billion euros of the money that the EU
Commission handed out "should not have been".
Internal EU policies:
These are areas of policy and spending directly - like research and cultural
spending - which are controlled by the Commission. The ECA found that there
was still "a material level of error in the legality and regularity of the
underlying transactions, mainly due to reimbursements to beneficiaries who
had overstated the costs for projects."
The ECA
also found significant problems in verifying the accounts of the EU's
external action and pre-accession aid budgets including "claims of
ineligible expenditure and breach of tendering procedures". For example, in
Bulgaria the Commission approved a 19.6 million euro payment for a project
despite the fact that the Sapard agency had not performed the required
checks before its approval, thus relying on unverified information.
ECA attacks Commission spin
The EU Commission argues that the responsibility for the fraud lies at the
national level, not with itself, as 78 per cent of EU funds are distributed
by member states in agricultural payments and structural funds. While poor
administration at the national level is an issue, the major problems are
systemic.
The ECA
criticises the Commission for attempting to spin its findings and attempting
to blame the member states. It
reminds the Commission
of its treaty obligations to uphold sound financial management:
“Regardless
of the method of implementation applied, the Commission bears the ultimate
responsibility for the legality and regularity of the transactions
underlying the accounts of the European Communities (Article 274 of the
Treaty).”
The Court also criticises the Commission for trying to put a positive spin
on the report, saying:
"in significant parts of the EU budget, the Directors-General give a more
positive account of the legality and regularity of EU spending than is
consistent with the Court’s audit."