Community policy
The policy areas in which the EU member states conduct joint European policy (such as agriculture and fisheries, the environment, trade, and economic and monetary policy) are regarded as community policy of the EU.
The TFEU sets out the provisions for control and accountability in the implementation of community policy. Essentially these are as follows:
- the European Parliament scrutinises the way in which the Commission implements policies and the budget;
- the European Court of Auditors (ECA) assists the European Parliament in its scrutinising role by auditing the regularity, efficiency and effectiveness of EU policies. The ECA expresses an annual opinion on the regularity of revenue and expenditure and issues some 20 special reports on EU policies each year;
- the European Parliament discusses these reports, for example in its Budgetary Control Committee.
The Budgetary Control Committee is also responsible for the annual discharge of the Commission (and other EU institutions) for its/their implementation of the EU budget.
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Intergovernmental (euro area) policies
In addition to the formal, or ’community’, EU policies, intergovernmental policies have gained importance in the EU, especially since the financial and economic crisis. These policies relate to agreements between specific groups of EU countries – they do not apply to the EU as a whole.
The euro-area countries are the main group of countries subject to separate agreements. The euro area currently consists of 20 member states. The European Central Bank is responsible for monetary policy in the euro area.
The Eurogroup’s involvement in EU policy-making has grown sharply in the past few years. The 20 euro-area countries (i.e. the majority of EU member states) have decided that they should play a prominent role in virtually all issues with a strong financial component.
In addition to certain agreements that apply to the EU as a whole, they also agree arrangements that apply only to the euro area. However, these agreements do not follow from the EU Treaty. Consequently, they are not subject to the control and accountability rules that apply to the EU as a whole. There is consequently an ‘audit gap’ in the provisions for control and accountability within the euro area. As far as we are aware, this discrepancy affects three policy areas in particular, i.e. the European banking union, the European emergency funds, and European economic management.
- The European banking union
The banking union regulates the supervision of the banking industry in the euro-area countries. Since 4 November 2014, the ECB has been the supervisory authority responsible for supervising significant banks in the euro area. The ECA is authorised to audit the way in which the ECB performs its new task. To this end, European law (i.e. the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM)) includes a provision identical to that in the EU Treaty on audits of the ECB’s monetary task. This means that the ECA is entitled to audit the ‘operational efficiency of the ECB’s management’. In practice, these audit powers are far more limited than the audit powers that the Netherlands Court of Audit used to have when the Dutch Central Bank (DNB) was responsible for this task. We have drawn attention to this in a number of audit reports, including a 2017 report entitled Supervision of Banks in the Netherlands. In October 2019, the ECA and the ECB signed a Memorandum of Understanding in an effort to repair this ‘audit gap’.
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- European emergency funds
Various emergency funds were launched in the throes of the crisis to provide financial assistance to ailing euro-area countries and to preserve the euro. One of the conclusions we drew in our 2015 report entitled Emergency assistance for eurozone countries during the crisis was that there was a gap in the democratic accountability and control of the Eurogroup (i.e. the finance ministers of the euro-area countries), the main decision-maker on the European emergency funds, and that the bulk of emergency fund expenditure was not subject to independent external audit.
On the insistence of, for example, the Contact Committee of the EU’s supreme audit institutions, a Board of Auditors was formed for the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), the largest emergency fund. This Board of Auditors acts as an independent external auditor. The European Court of Auditors has no powers to audit the ESM.
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- European economic governance
In our 2014 report on the coordination of European budgetary and macroeconomic policy in the European Semester, we found that the Eurogroup was playing an increasingly important role, but that the usual democratic accountability and control mechanisms had not been put in place. The Eurogroup is not accountable to any parliamentary institution, despite playing a prominent role in the 1997 Stability and Growth Pact, notably in relation to the 2011 six-pack and the 2013 two-pack reforms of the growth pact. These measures impose additional requirements on the euro-area countries that do not apply to other EU member states.
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