PURPOSE: presentation of the Annual report of the Court of Auditors on the implementation of the budget concerning the financial year 2016.
CONTENT: the Court of Auditors published its 40th annual report on the implementation of the general budget of the Union for the year 2016. This report follows a five-part structure:
The Court concludes that payments for 2016 are legal and regular, with the exception of those based on the cost reimbursement payments. It believes that the EU accounts present a true and fair view of the EUs financial position.
The audit also focuses on the budget implementation of the European Parliament.
Overall, audit evidence indicates that spending on Administration is not affected by a material level of error. For this MFF heading area, testing of transactions indicates that the estimated level of error present in the population is 0.2 %.
The Court noted that the institutions had collectively cut the number of posts in the establishment plan by 4% over the period from 2013 to 2017. The institutions had reduced the number of staff (posts actually occupied by a staff member) by 1.4 % between 2013 and 2017.
Parliament remains fully committed to implement the agreed cuts. 60 posts will be deleted in 2018 and 59 in 2019, as specified in 2015.
The Court also examined how the budgeted number of contract staff had changed. This number rose from 4 517 to 5 417 between 2013 and 2017 - an increase of 19.9 %. Contract staff made up 11.4 % of the number of staff in the establishment plan in 2013, and 14.2 % in 2017. The European Parliaments use of contract staff to perform tasks previously carried out by external contractors accounts for most of this increase.
For one payment to a political group, the Court found weaknesses in checks on the authorisation and settlement of expenditure made in 2015 but cleared in 2016. It also found that payments were made without being covered by contracts resulting from a procurement procedure.
The Court recommended that the European Parliament reviews its framework for monitoring the implementation of budget appropriations allocated to political groups. It should also provide better guidance to political groups and monitor more effectively how they apply the rules for authorising and settling expenditure, and how they carry out procurement procedures.
Parliament takes note of the recommendation and will aim for improvements while keeping the current set of rules.