Budget 2015: European Commission makes new proposal to Parliament and Council

2014-12-01

The European Commission has adopted a new draft EU budget for 2015 after negotiations between the European Parliament and the Council (the EU Member States) did not result in an agreement at the end of the budgetary conciliation period on 17 November. The new draft budget for 2015 foresees €145.2 billion in commitments (+1.8% on 2014) and €141.3 billion in payments (+0.7% on 2014). The proposal has been transmitted to the European Parliament and the Council and with a view to continuing negotiations early next week.

"Our new budget proposal takes into account the views of the European Parliament and the Council, thus providing a sound basis for the renewal of negotiations", said Kristalina Georgieva, Vice-President for Budget and Human Resources. "It will hopefully pave the way for agreement on the 2015 EU budget and on the pending draft amending budgets for 2014, which we have proposed to help tackle the growing problem of unpaid bills. I've said it before and I'll say it again: this is not a budget for Brussels. Businesses, researchers, students, NGOs as well as towns and regions across the EU await the outcome of these talks, in order to have access to much needed funding. The Commission as an honest broker in these discussions will do everything in its power to provide Europe with a budget that serves our half a billion EU citizens."

The talks will cover the 2015 budget proposal, but also Draft Amending Budgets (DABs) for 2014. The Commission proposed the DABs for 2014 to cover legal obligations in research and innovation, education and support for small and medium-sized enterprises, as well as unusually high reimbursement claims from Member States in cohesion policy. This would come at no extra cost to national budgets, because of unexpected revenue, mostly from competition fines.

The proposal for a new Draft Budget 2015 is focused on supporting in particular those policies in favour of competitiveness and economic convergence, thus contributing to growth and jobs, as well as those budget lines which allow Europe to address crises especially in its neighbourhood.

Source: European Commission