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Managing State aid compliance in Cohesion policy programmes Rona Michie, European Policies Research Centre, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow Meeting of the Monitoring Committee, Riga, 24 November 2010. IQ-Net partners – regional and national programme management authorities. Italy
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Managing State aid compliance in Cohesion policy programmes Rona Michie, European Policies Research Centre, University of Strathclyde, GlasgowMeeting of the Monitoring Committee, Riga, 24 November 2010
IQ-Net partners – regional and national programme management authorities • Italy • Lombardia • IPI / Ministry of Economic • Development • Austria • Niederösterreich • Steiermark • Belgium • Enterprise Flanders • Poland • Śląskie Voivodeship • (Marshal’s office) • Czech Republic • Ministry for Regional • Development • Portugal • Financial Institute for • Regional Development (IFDR) • Denmark • Danish Enterprise & • Construction Authority • Slovenia • Government Office for Local Self- • Government & Regional Policy • Finland • Keski-Suomi • Min. of Employment & the Economy • Spain • País Vasco (Province of Bizkaia) • France • DATAR • Sweden • Tillväxtverket (Swedish Agency for • Economic & Regional Growth) • Germany • Nordrhein-Westfalen • Sachsen-Anhalt • United Kingdom • North-East England • Department of Communities & • Local Government (CLG) • Wales (WEFO) • Scottish Government • Hungary • Hungarian Enterprise Development Centre (MAG) • in association with National Development Agency • Greece • Management Organisation Unit • of Development Programmes S.A.
Methodology • Methodology – interviews and desk research • Focus today on practical issues faced by partners when trying to manage compliance • Absence of ‘sharp edges’ has practical consequences in particular areas
Managing compliance – domestic arrangements • State aid rules do not specify internal structures for managing compliance • Structures are more formal in new Member States – legacy of pre-accession era • Common theme: importance of training, advice and information by State aid specialists; only in Slovenia is binding opinion given • Attitudes to compliance vary: • extreme caution – notify for legal certainty in cases of doubt • informed risk analysis • “we try to comply, but if it really doesn’t suit, we don’t”
Managing compliance – EU framework • In principle all aid must be notified to and approved by the Commission before implementation • In practice, not workable, so most aid in form of schemes, for which potentially ‘000s of beneficiaries • Hierarchy of scrutiny has emerged – from case-by-case analysis to reporting (GBER) or ‘no aid’ (de minimis)
Use of block exemptions Use of block exemptions among IQ-Net partners: • Those who use say it offers flexibility and room for manoeuvre • National framework legislation in France uses GBER as a template • Italian ‘omnibus’ scheme introduced instead of using GBER • Some see no benefit – Pais Vasco, Flanders
de minimis – experience of IQ-Net partners • de minimis widely used by IQ-Net partners • avoids having to define State aid; no constraint on aid rate or eligible expenditure • different attitudes use of de minimis: • last resort for some (because of monitoring and compliance obligations) • for others: ‘safe harbour’; ‘get-out-of-jail-free’ card • different approaches to monitoring and compliance • reliance on beneficiary declarations • actual or proposed databases of awards
Use of de minimis databases • Use of databases to help monitor de minimis levels: • Poland: SHRIMP – System for Collection, Reporting and Monitoring Aid • Italy: BDA – Banca Dati Anagrafica • Portugal • Slovenia • Some programmes decided they would be too costly to develop, or that de minimis aid was too marginal
Managing compliance – partner feedback • Workshops held at Steiermark IQ-Net meeting – the main messages: • Perception that definition of State aid is changing and moving into new areas • JEREMIE and JESSICA problematic • Use of de minimis labour intensive and questions about use of databases
Managing compliance – partner feedback Partner feedback (continued) • Lack of clear definitions and the complexity and constantly evolving nature of the rules makes the system fraught with uncertainty • Need for better, more centralised, consistent and comprehensive information
Issues, trends and tensions • Principles drafted 50+ years ago difficult to apply today • Blurred boundary public/private sector, complex areas such as healthcare, infrastructure, public/private partnerships • All these often supported under Cohesion policy programmes • Greater awareness of rules in current planning period • State aid rules are a major source of anxiety for many
Issues, trends and tensions (cont’d) • Significant asymmetries of risk in compliance process • Technical demands of compliance are considerable • State aid compliance may frustrate Cohesion objectives • Structural Funds may achieve greater State aid compliance than purely domestic policy
Thank you for your attention! Pandora's Box and the Delphic Oracle: EU Cohesion Policy and State Aid Compliance, IQ-Net Thematic Paper 24(2) Fiona Wishlade and Rona Michie The full paper can be downloaded from the IQ-Net website at: http://www.eprc.strath.ac.uk/iqnet/reports.cfm rona.michie@strath.ac.uk