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Around Europe Online
No. 267 November-December 2004
 
Contents
Browse below or click on the following to view an article

How is the European Union financed?

Development, Security and Justice

Strangers in a Foreign Land – What has been done ?
 

How is the European Union Financed? 
In 2003 the European Union spent just over 90 billion euros, almost half of which went to finance the common agricultural policy. The recent accession of 10 new Member States, all poorer than any of the previous 15, will inevitably soon push the budget over 100 billion euros, although steps have been taken to ensure that the relatively backward agriculture of the new Member States does not send farm spending back to the levels of 70% and 80% that existed in the past and that other policies receive adequate finance.

The EU's budget differs from national budgets in that the budgetary authority, i.e. the European Parliament and the Council of Ministers in co-decision, sets only the level of expenditure. The European Commission then collects enough revenue from the Member States to pay for this agreed spending. It is not a case of seeing how much money is available and then sharing it among the various policies. Thus the budget is always balanced and no deficit is possible. However, spending is not unlimited: the cost of the budget may not exceed 1.24% of the gross national income of the EU.

Where does the money come from? The Treaty of Rome (1957) provided for the EEC to be financed by national contributions for a transitional period, pending the introduction of own resources. Own resources mean a source of finance independent of the Member States, consisting of revenue assigned once-and-for-all to the Community to fund its actions. The Member States are obliged to make this revenue available to the Community, or now the EU. Although the European Parliament co-decides how the money is spent, it has no say over where the own resources come from: this is determined by the Council, by unanimous agreement, not by majority vote.

In 1970 a Council decision defined Community own resources, ending the previous system of national contributions, which might be thought to give Member States scope for controlling Community policies. This marked the beginning of an autonomous system of financing based on import duties (customs duties and agricultural levies), as well as foreseeing a future resource based on value added tax (VAT). In a single market based on a customs union, it makes no sense for duties collected on imports at Rotterdam or Antwerp to remain in the Netherlands or Belgium respectively when the imports may circulate freely and be destined for the other end of Europe.

VAT own resources were introduced when import duties proved insufficient to finance the budget. As import tariffs fall all over the world as a result of WTO trade negotiations and the establishment of free-trade agreements, and as former outside countries become Member States of the EU and its single market, import duties yield less income. The need to harmonize VAT rules meant that the VAT resource emerged only in 1980. Its amount is obtained by applying a "rate of call", currently 0.5%, to a tax-base determined in a uniform manner. In other words, although VAT is imperfectly harmonized as regards coverage of goods and services and national tax-rates vary, Member States base their contributions on the total tax-base (the value of goods and services sold to consumers) derived from an "idealized" system of VAT from which all anomalies have been removed. To protect weaker economies, the base may not exceed 50% of a Member State's gross national income (GNI). In recent years Greece, Spain, Ireland, Luxembourg and Portugal, joined occasionally by one or two other States, apply the rate of call to 50% of their GNI instead of to their VAT-base. Nearly all the 10 new Member States will have their VAT contributions reduced by this "capping" mechanism.

Faced with the growing insufficiency of the VAT resource, in 1988 the Council introduced a new own resource, based on a uniform percentage of each Member State's gross national product (GNP, more recently redefined as gross national income or GNI), to meet any shortfall in revenue.

Its own resources set the EU apart from other international bodies, such as the UN or NATO, which rely for funding on voluntary contributions from their members. EU Member States may not withhold their contributions at will, as members of other international organizations have sometimes done. Moreover, interest is charged on late payments.

In 2003, total revenue of about 93½ billion euros was made up as follows: just over 10% came from duties and other charges on imports. Changes in international trading rules reduced the scope for charging such duties. Also, in 2000, the Member States decided unanimously that retaining 10% of these duties as a reward for collecting them was not enough. Since 2000 they retain 25% of the amounts that they charge on behalf of the EU, which caused some displeasure to the European Parliament.

About 22.5% came from the VAT-based resource. This has also diminished as Member States have lowered the rate of call from a high of 1.4% of the tax-base, via 1% and 0.75% to its present 0.5%. These reductions mean that direct contributions based on a uniform share of Member State's GNI now account for about 55% of the EU's income (there are also some minor sources of income). This was not how the founders of the own resources system envisaged things. They probably realized that import duties would decrease owing to successive GATT rounds and free-trade agreements, but probably did not foresee the extent of the reduction. Nor might they have expected Member States to be so greedy over their share.

The VAT-based resource was optimistically seen in the 1970s as the first step in the establishment of a genuine fiscal contribution to the Community's budget: the idea was that one day citizens spending money on goods and services would contribute part of their VAT directly to the Community. Instead, Member States have been so anxious to ensure that they do not pay too much nor their fellow Members too little that they have increasingly broken the link between individual Europeans' spending and the budget: the VAT resource is calculated as an aggregate, like the biggest current resource, the one based on GNI.

There is occasional talk of retaining only direct contributions based on a uniform percentage of GNI, which were originally seen as minor additions to other revenue to make up a possible shortfall. While this would be simpler and would reflect, to a degree, countries' ability to pay, such a move would disappoint those who wish to maintain a tenuous link between the EU's income and the citizens and businesses of Europe. At present, products arriving in the EU from the advanced industrial countries, unless they are subject to special preferential treatment, must contribute, through import duties, to the European budget. Similarly, citizens' expenditure on goods and services helps to determine their country's VAT-based contribution. So long as this fiscal resource remains, there is a precedent for a European tax: suggestions have already been made for a Europe-wide energy tax, environment tax or carbon dioxide tax, or a tax on financial transactions (similar to the celebrated "Tobin tax") to fund the budget.

Discussions of EU budget revenue may seem dry and technical. There are nevertheless important principles at stake. Those who want the European Union to have the power to rise above a collection of nationalisms and act autonomously for the good of all its people and, indeed, of people in the wider world, should not favour moves towards a system of financing purely by national contributions that, ultimately, enable the Member States to hold the purse-strings tight and thus perhaps re-nationalize common policies now funded by a common budget.

This article was written by a Member of Belgium and Luxembourg Monthly Meeting who follows the EU's finances closely.

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Development, Security and Justice
QCEA held its Associate Members Conference in conjunction with QPSW on the subject of Economic Justice from 5 to 7 November 2004. This is not a report of the conference as a whole but rather a reflection on some of the interconnections between development, security and (economic) justice, prompted by the talk given by one of the main speakers, Professor Frances Stewart of the Centre for Research on Inequality, Human Security and Ethnicity (CRISE) in Oxford.

It is important to look at these interconnections not only because they are real but more importantly because they are often overlooked. And in overlooking them, the international community denies itself the opportunity to address the root causes of violent conflict.

We hear much of the ‘War on Terrorism’ or the ‘War on Terror’ and often such discussions are linked to concepts such as the ‘clash of civilisations’. Often, this is a thinly veiled reference to a clash between the three mono-theistic religions, Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. In many instances, violent conflicts erupt and we hear about them as a conflict between different ethnic groups which are part of these three faith groups.

This approach is intended to lead us to think that there is something intrinsic to one or maybe even all of these religions that lead them to clash in violent conflicts; it is seen as inevitable and a result of extreme adherence to ones faith.

But violent conflicts of this kind tend to be based on political violence, i.e. violence with a political goal. That may be state takeover, acquisition of (more) power, the acknowledgement of rights for a particular group, a wish for autonomy or separation from a larger state/political entity or the suppression of opposition. None of these goals are intrinsically religious.

However, what is also clear is the fact that in many of the violent conflicts all over the world there are serious and clearly visible economic and political factors in play. There are political, economic and social inequalities between different groups and between different countries. There are differences in the access to resources – both resources for survival and for economic betterment. There are different levels of access to jobs and income.

Violent conflict itself also has economic dimensions – there is money to be made from it; arms trade, corruption, provision of accommodation and food to soldiers, human trafficking are all aspects of how people make money from war. On the other hand, violent conflict has a negative impact on economic growth, leads to the destruction of infrastructure, and increases in military expenditure in concert with tax rises and reductions in government expenditure on health, education and other social services. And there is often a negative impact on exports.

What is also true is the fact that the use of identity, be it religion, culture, language or race, is a powerful mobilising agent in situations where there is the economic or political breeding ground for conflict. And once the genie of identity has been released into the conflict, it is very difficult to put back into the bottle.

What does that mean for the international community? It means that it is more important than ever to address the economic, social and political rootcauses of conflicts in order to remove the incentive for people to look to group identity to give them something to hold onto.

This means redressing the economic balance; this means for the rich countries to not only tinker with development but to invest heavily in conflict prone countries in ways that are conflict sensitive, that do not favour one group over another, in ways that allow people to develop their economies and their societies to suit their cultural, religious and ethnic composition. It does not mean diverting scarce development resources into military security (or so-called ‘peace-keeping’) operations. It means that investment in short term crisis management and long term conflict prevention and peace building along side development must take place and must be adequately funded. It means that the international community must develop the right tools to undertake this work and to engage communities (and that means women, men and children at the grass roots and not just politicians) in conflict areas in the process to create local ownership. Nothing short of this will provide long term solutions.

Martina Weitsch

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Strangers in a Foreign Land – What has been done?

In October 2000, QCEA’s Associate Members’ Conference in Leuven addressed a range of issues relating to asylum and migration. It concluded with a statement which is still relevant today and is available on our website on http://www.quaker.org/qcea/strangers/statement2000.htm.

The same Associate Members’ Conference agreed ‘Ideas for Information, Reflection and Action by Individuals and Meetings’ and it may now be time to reflect on what has been done in response to these ideas.

Council Member Dieter Hartwich of Belgium and Luxembourg Monthly Meeting has agreed to collate any responses QCEA receives to this call.

Tell us what you and/or your Meeting/Monthly Meeting/General Meeting/Quarterly Meeting/Yearly Meeting has done in response to the following ideas:

  • Invite speakers to Meeting for an ongoing clarification of thought
  • Counter anti-refugee sentiments (in the press and other places) with informed statements, including statistics and personal stories where appropriate
  • Challenge myths and stereotypes involving migrants wherever these are encountered
  • Encourage positive reporting in the media
  • Lobby politicians on local/national/European level
  • Seek to understand the root causes of migration
  • Seek to understand the causes of local anti-refugee sentiments
  • Activate/reactivate MM social action groups
  • Organise social events for/with refugees
  • Make available space in Friends’ Meeting Houses for use by refugee groups
  • Befriend individual refugees
  • Find out information on new asylum seekers arriving in the locality
  • Accompany refugees in their contact with local authorities
  • Support local refugee service initiatives (advocacy, literacy, language, orientation)
  • Organise collections of furniture, clothes, dictionaries, toys, money

Please send your responses to this call for feedback to Liz Scurfield at lscurfield@qcea.org (you can also send it by fax or post if necessary) by 31 January 2005. We will then publish the results in our March edition of Around Europe.

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