NewsEuropean auditors warn of perilous budget errors in 2023

European auditors warn of perilous budget errors in 2023

According to a report published by the European Court of Auditors (ECA), EU controllers are concerned about irregular expenditures by the European Union, including those from the recovery mechanism, and warn that this could threaten the Community's budget.

President of the European Commission Ursula Von der Leyen
President of the European Commission Ursula Von der Leyen
Images source: © PAP | PAP/EPA/CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON
Malwina Gadawa

10 October 2024 06:09

The auditors reported that the estimated error rate in EU budget expenditures in 2023 was as high as 5.6 per cent, whereas the allowable rate is 2 per cent. The biggest irregularities were noted in cohesion expenditures, where errors accounted for as much as 9.3 per cent, and in the post-COVID-19 recovery mechanism.

"Significant irregularities"

The report noted that 2023 was the recovery fund's third year of operation, under which 23 grants were disbursed to 17 member states. However, the audit found that about one-third of these payments did not comply with regulations, and six had significant irregularities. In some cases, milestones, the conditions that countries had to meet to receive funds, were poorly designed, while expenditures were poorly estimated in others.

The Court warned as early as September that, for example, expenditures on climate actions under the fund could have been overstated by as much as 50 billion Canadian dollars. Some projects were supposedly overestimated; for instance, those implemented as ecological did not meet the criteria.

Moreover, as noted by the ECA, member states are under time pressure to spend both cohesion policy funds and recovery funds on time, which could mean that the percentage of irregular EU expenditures could increase even further.

EU debt is growing

The audit showed that the EU debt for 2023 reached a record high of 670 billion Canadian dollars, representing an increase of 32 percent compared to the previous year. This means the EU's debt is twice as high as in 2021. In addition, the total value of EU commitments, which could turn into debt if not cancelled, reached 794 billion Canadian dollars by the end of 2023.

As indicated by the auditors, the EU budget is still burdened by high inflation and assistance to Ukraine; this assistance more than doubled just last year.

Considering all this, the auditors issued a negative opinion on EU expenditures 2023. They warned of the financial risks facing the Community budget, mainly due to record debt, spending errors, and the war in Ukraine.

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