Title: European Union and Development Policy
1European UnionandDevelopment Policy
- Policies, organization and trends
- Tuukka Castrén, adviser, MFA, Finland
- March 27th, 2007
2 3Scale of EU (251) ODA
- 40 billion in 2005
- 0.35 ODA/GNI ratio EU average
- 55 of global ODA
- EC in own right is the 3rd largest donor after US
and Japan - Scaling-up, increase in EU aid 30 bill./year
4Scaling-up
- EU15 0.7 of GNI by 2015.
- EU10 to reach 0.33
- EU planned increase by 2010 around 30 billion
per year - Commission 2007-2013 3 billion in extra
funding per year
5Regions
6How increase is focussed?
- 7.5 billion, up 20 from 2004
- Africa, Caribbean, Pacific 3 511 m 33
- Middle East/Mediterranean 1 075 m 7
- Asia 834 m 37
- Tacis 515 m 2
- Latin America 329 m 5
- South Africa 155 m 15
- Thematic Programmes others 1 090 m 5
Increase of commitments with 54 since
2001 Including 18m accounting correction
7How is EU aid used?
- Social sectors 44
- Infrastructure 12
- Debt forgiveness 17
- Emergency aid 8
- Administration 6
- Focus on poverty eradication MDGs
8Different channels
6.2 billion
52 increase since 2001 Budget payments for ACP
350 million
9European Development Fund - EDF
- Not part of the Community budget
- Based on Cotonou Agreement
- Applies to Sub-Saharan African, Caribbean and
Pacific countries (ACP) only - Implementation managed by the Commission
- 10th agreed in 2006 and administrative procedures
not finalised - Total value 23 bill. for 2008-2013
- Hungary contributed in the 10th EDF, not 9th -gt
eligibility
10European Development Fund - EDF
- Operates separately from the EU budget
- Inter-governmental agreement, resources consist
of direct contributions from the Member States - currently 9th EDF is being implemented
1110th EDF financial allocations
- Financial protocol -gt Internal agreement -gt Final
allocations - Financial allocation 2 steps
- Initial amount
- Incitative tranche Programming dialogue
- Formal notification initial amount confirmed or
increased - Result-based approach
- Indicators
- Annual reviews (possibility of increase)
- Mid-term and end of term reviews
- Programming still on-going
12 EU Budget - DCI
- Geographic programmes
- Privileged cooperation instrument
- Development priorities of partner country/region
- Asia,Latin America, South Africa
- Thematic Programmes
- Specific area of interest with global coverage
- Distinctive added value subsidiarity
- Geographic programme not best instrument to
achieve policy objectives - Multi-regional actions, pilot projects, difficult
partnerships - Also ACP
13EuropeAid speed
Average 3.3 implementation years EDF down to 4
years
14- Institutions and structures
15Institutions of the EU
- European Commission
- Council of the European Union
- European Council (NOT Council of Europe)
- Presidency of the European Union
- European Parliament
16Commission
- Politically independent institution the general
interest of the European Union - Appointed for five-year term by the Council and
vote of appointment by the Parliament - 25 Commissioners
- Directorates-General (DGx)
17Functions of the Commission
- Power of initiation of legislation
- Managing and implementing Community policies and
programmes - Executing the Community budget
- Ensuring that Community law is applied
18Workings of the Commission
- Directorate General (DG) for Development
- DG for External Relations (RELEX)
- DG EuropeAid
- DG Trade
- European Community Humanitarian Office (ECHO)
- DG Enlargement
19DG Development Louis Michel
- Initiates and formulates the EUs development
co-operation policy for all developing countries - In charge of thematic policies (human and social
development gender) - Coordinates the Communitys relations with
African, Caribbean and Pacific countries (ACP) - Responsible for administrating the European
Development Fund
20DG RELEX Benita Ferrero-Waldner
- DG for External Relations and the European
Neighborhood Policy - Manages Community bilateral relations with all
non-ACP countries - Coordinates Commissions external relations
activities (including CFSP) - Coordinates Commissions neighborhood policy
- Responsible for administrating the appr. 120
Commission delegations in third countries
21EuropeAid Benita Ferrero-Waldner
- Established in 2001
- Implements Community external assistance
(Community funds and EDF) - Responsible for all phases of the project cycle
22Others
- DG Trade Peter Mandelson
- European Community Humanitarian Office (ECHO)
Louis Michel
23Council of the European Union
- Intergovernmental, ministerial level
- 27 Member States
- Organised in
- Configurations (GAERC)
- Presidency
- Coreper (Permanent Representatives Committee)
- Secretary General
24Functions of the Council of the European Union
- Main decision-making body
- Legislator (with the Parliament)
- Coordination of broad economic policies of Member
States - Defining and implementing Common Foreign and
Security Policy - Coordination of actions in police and judicial
cooperation in criminal matters
25Workings of the Council
- Regular meetings of COREPER (of officials in
charge of development who are based in Brussels) - Regular meetings of GAERC
- Informal meeting of Development Ministers
26European Council
- Heads of States
- Meets a few time a year to take major political
decisions
27Presidency of the European Union
- Rotating every six month
- Functions
- Organising and chairing meetings of the Council
and its working groups - Representing the Council
- Take forward outstanding negotiations from the
previous Presidency
28The EC as a donor
- Potential value added of EC
- Political neutrality
- Scale global reach
- Framework for coordination
- Common mechanism
- Some challenges
- Lack of specialist expertise lack of staff
- Cumbersome procedures
- Poor image though has much improved
- Unfamiliar culture
- Difficulties to focus
29Conclusions
- EU joint action on DC
- Policy basis strengthening step by step
- Good debate on aid effectiveness
- Committed to increasing ODA
- First steps on joint programming
- But at same time
- Poor coordination complementarity
- EC share of EU ODA likely to go down
- EU still weak in international affairs
- Stronger agreement on common policy in other
external action areas
30- The European Consensuson Development
31Background
- Joint Council-Commission Statement
(November 2000)Why revise it? - The world has changed (security,migration, social
dimension of globalisation, ..) - Europe has been enlarged
- The global development agenda has been
strengthened (MDGs, Monterrey, etc.)
32Key ideas of revision
- Maintain the philosophy of the 2000 Statement
- Better articulate development policy with other
elements of the EU external action - Ensure its application to all developing
countries - Better associate Member States to the elaboration
of a common vision of development - Fully associate the European Parliament
Tripartite Statement
33The European Consensus on Development
- Common vision of development for Commission and
member States - First time in 50 years
- Legitimating the EU role in the world
34The European Consensus on Development
- Joint Declaration by Council, Commission,
Parliament - Two parts
- Part I The EU Vision of Development (Commission
and Member States) - Part II The EC Development policy (Commission)
35- Part I
- The EU Vision of Development
36Objectives
- Primary objective
- Poverty reduction and, eventually, poverty
eradication in the context of sustainable
development - Millennium Development Goals
- Complementary objectives
- good governance, human rights
37Approach to poverty reduction
- Poverty has many dimesions
- economic, human, political, socio-cultural
capabilities - Balanced approach
- human development
- protection of natural resources
- investments in pro-poor wealth creation
38Common values
- Respect for human rights
- Fundamental freedoms
- Peace
- Democracy
- Good governance
- Gender equality
- The rule of law
- Solidarity
- Justice
- Commitment to multilateralism
39Key principles
- Ownership, Partnership
- Political dialogue
- Participation of civil society
- Gender equality
- Commitment to fragile states
40Means and modalities
- Aid effectiveness and predictability
- harmonisation and alignment (Paris Declaration
additional EU commitments) - general and sector budget support
- new mechanisms (more predictable, less volatile)
-
41- Part II
- The European Community Development Policy
42Commissions comparative advantages
- The particular role of the Commission
- global presence and expertise as a delivery agent
- promotion of policy coherence
- promoting best practices and stimulating the
debate on development - facilitation of coordination and harmonisation
- support to democracy, human rights, good
governance and respect for international law - promotion of participation of civil society and
North-South solidarity
43Guiding principles
- Differentiated approach
- mix of objectives and modalities depending on
contexts and needs (LDCs, LICs, MICs, fragile
states) - Concentration at country/ regional level
44Areas for Community action
- Trade and regional integration
- Environment and sustainable management of natural
resources - Infrastructure, communications and transport
- Water and energy
- Rural development, territorial planning,
agriculture and food security - Governance, democracy, human rights, and support
for economic and institutional reforms - Conflict prevention and fragile states
- Human development
- Social cohesion and employment
45Mainstreaming
- Democracy, good governance, human rights, the
rights of children and indigenous peoples - Gender equality
- Environmental sustainability
- HIV/ AIDS
46Other actions
- Support to global funds and initiatives
- linked to MDGs and Global Public Goods
- Policy coherence for development
- rolling work programme to be agreed between
Commission and Member States
47Aid modalities
- A wide range of modalities based on needs and
performance - budget Support
- micro-finance approach
- project aid
- EIB investments
48- External cooperation instruments
49The new instruments
- Pre-accession (IPA)
- Neighbourhood (ENPI)
- European Development Fund
- Development (DCI)
- Human rights (EIDHR)
- Stability (IfS)
- Nuclear Safety (NSI)
- Industrialised countries (ICI)
50Pre-accession instrument (IPA)
- Scope Transition assistance
- Institution building
- Cross-border cooperation
- Regional, rural human resources
- development
- Region 6 Western Balkans countries and
- Turkey
- Funding Average 1.6 billion per year
- Start January 2007
- Replaces Phare, Ispa, Sapard, Cards and
- Turkey pre-accession Regulations
51Neighbourhood instrument (ENPI)
- Scope Country specific programmes
- Cross border cooperation with EU Member
States - Region 17 countries Mediterranean, Eastern
Europe, Russia, Caucasus, Middle East - Funding Average 1.6 billion per year
- Start Expected January 2007
- Replaces Mainly Tacis and Meda Regulations
5210th European Development Fund (EDF)
- Scope Based on Cotonou agreement
- Country specific programmes
- Horizontal programmes
- Region 78 African, Caribbean, Pacific countries
and OCTs - Funding Average 3.7 billion per year
- Start Expected January 2008
- Replaces 9th EDF
53Development instrument (DCI)
- Scope I Country specific programmes
-
-
- Region Latin America, (Central) Asia, East of
Jordan, South Africa - Funding Average 1.4 billion per year
- Start Expected January 2007
- Replaces Mainly ALA, Tacis and South Africa
Regulations
54Development instrument (DCI)
- Scope II Support to sugar production
restructuring - Region African, Caribbean, Pacific countries
- Funding Average 180 million per year
- Start Expected January 2007
- Replaces Sugar Regulation
55Development instrument (DCI)
- Scope III Thematic programmes
- Human social development
- environment, non-state actors
- food security
- migration and asylum
-
- Region All third countries
- except industrialised / preaccession
- Funding Average 800 million per year
- Start Expected January 2007
- Replaces More than 10 thematic Regulations
56Democracy and human rights (EIDHR)
- Scope Democracy (election observations)
- Rule of law
- Human rights
- Fundamental freedoms
- Region All third countries
- except industrialised countries
- Funding Average 160 million per year
- Start Expected March 2007
- Replaces Previous EIDHR Regulation
57Stability instrument (IfS)
- Scope I Crisis response and preparedness
- II Global and trans-regional border
- challenges
-
- Region All third countries
- except industrialised countries
- Funding Average 290 million per year
- Start Expected January 2007
- Replaces Mainly Rapid Reaction Mechanism
58Nuclear safety instrument (NSI)
- Scope Nuclear safety
- Radiation protection
- Nuclear material safeguards
-
- Region All third countries
- except industrialised countries
- Funding Average 75 million per year
- Start Expected March 2007
- Replaces Part of Tacis Regulation
59Industrialised countries (ICI)
- Scope Cooperation programmes
- Exchange programmes
-
- Region Industrialised countries (North
America, Australia, New Zealand) - Funding Average 25 million per year
- Start Expected January 2007
- Replaces Previous ICI Regulation
60All instruments
- Simplification From 35 instruments to 10
- New for all partner countries
- Coverage One main instrument/country Several
specific instruments -
- Example Egypt
- Main instrument ENPI
- Others DCI / EIDHR / NSI / IfS
-
8 new instruments and humanitarian and
macro-financial assistance
61Instruments managed by AIDCO
- Strategies (CSP/IP) DGs RELEX and DEV
- Democratic Informal dialogue on CSP/IP
- Scrutiny with EP (except EDF)
- New for all instruments
- Annual (AAP) AIDCO
- programmes All countries
- New for ALA/EDF/SA countries
62Instruments managed by AIDCO
- Comitology (CSP / IP / AAP) Member states
committees - New to be set up (except EDF)
- EP droit de (CSP / IP / AAP) formal check
- regard Not for NSI / EDF
- New for all other instruments
- Rules Financial Regulation /
- Practical Guide
- New adaptation from 01.01.07
63Instrument specific
- ENPI New CBC in the EU
- EDF / DCI New annual programmes
- DCI Financing types projects / budget
support / SWAPs / etc - New twinning / co-financing /
- debt relief / operating costs
- NSI New coverage all third countries
- (except ICI countries)
- IfS New approach drugs / energy
- / trafficking / etc
64 65Aid Effectiveness
66Aid Effectiveness
- EU committed to Paris Declaration on Aid
Effectiveness - Forefront in implementation
- EU encourages
- using budget support and sector programmes
instead of small projects - capacity building through coordinated programmes
67Aid Effectiveness
- Untying of aid
- New aid instruments
- New financing modalities
68Some challenges
- All partners need to commit
- Knowledge on the PRSP
- Roles of governments, parliaments, civil society
- Difficult partnerships, conflict prevention and
governance - Alignment means more budget support
- Are we ready
- How to ensure linkages
- PRSPs going beyond health and education
- Infrastructure for trade and growth
- Market access not everything
- Using trade regimes means rightdomestic
conditions - Domestic reform and strengthen supply-side
69Conclusion
- EU has chosen to be in the forefront
- The EU is mobilising more and better aid
- The EU as the most open market in the world The
EU is working on greater policy coherence - The EU is focusing on Africa
- Challenges ahead
- Maintaining the commitment of EU member states
- Demonstrating the commitment of partner countries
- ensuring mutual accountability for development
results
70 http//ec.europa.eu/europeaid/frontoffice
- Info Point
- External Cooperation
- Rue de la Loi 41
- 02 299 98 14
- Mo-Fri 10.00-16.00
71Questions and answers