NGOs denounce cuts, tweaks to 2018 EU budget for development aid

NGOs denounce cuts, tweaks to 2018 EU budget for development aid

EU member states decided on Wednesday (12 July) to cut the proposed EU budget for 2018 by €1.2 billion. The European Parliament deplored this “mechanical” cut, while NGOs denounced the decrease of development aid and its re-directing to combat immigration.

On 30 May, Budget Commissioner Günther Oettinger presented the executive’s draft EU budget for 2018, acknowledging decision-making difficulties.

The Council decided to cut down the Commission’s draft budget by €1.2 billion in commitments (-0.75%) and by €795.5 million in payments (-0.55%). The Commission’s draft amounts to €159, 551.2 million in commitment appropriations and €144, 805.5 million in payment appropriations.

Commitments are the total volume of promises for future payments that can be made in a given year. Payments are the actual money paid in a given year from the EU budget to cover commitments. Commitments must be honoured with payments, either in the same year or, particularly in the case of multi-year projects, over the following years.

The European Parliament’s rapporteur for the EU’s 2108 budget, Romanian PMP lawmaker Siegfried Mureşan (EPP), deplored that the member countries decided to cut down the Commission’s proposal “mechanically” by €1.2 billion.

“The Council’s position on the EU Draft Budget 2018 is in contradiction with its own political commitments. Member states are proposing indiscriminate, mechanical cuts to the very priorities that they put forward at the beginning of the year,” Mureşan stated.

Reacting to the member states’ position, development and humanitarian organisations Plan International, ONE, Oxfam and Save the Children denounced what they said was a €90 million cut from the development aid budget compared to the Commission’s 2018 draft budget – a decrease of 6.5% compared to 2017.

“Member states’ call to cut development aid at a time of increasing need is short-sighted and unwise. Today’s challenges will become tomorrow’s problems,” stated Valentina Barbagallo, Brussels Policy and Advocacy Manager from the ONE Campaign.

Source: EURACTIV. Read full article.
13 July, 2017