Europaudvalget 2018-19 (1. samling)
EUU Alm.del Bilag 15
Offentligt
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On the road
to the Union?
Special theme
EU Pre-accessıon Aid
Journal
N
o
08/09
|
AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2018
Political will means everything!
EUU, Alm.del - 2018-19 (1. samling) - Bilag 15: Rapport fra Den Europæiske Revisionsret august/september 2018
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Table of contents
NUMBER 08/09
August/September 2018
05
INTERVIEW
Bettina Jakobsen, ECA Member
08
INTERVIEW
Christian Danielsson, Director-General of DG NEAR of the European Commission
Perspective of EU membership important
Political will is
driver for progress and reconciliation in
essential for
accession progress Western Balkans
04
05
EDITORIAL
Political will is essential for accession
progress
Interview with Bettina Jakobsen
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the
Presidency
important driver for progress and
reconciliation in Western Balkans
Interview with Christian Danielsson,
Director-General of DG NEAR of the
European Commission
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the
Presidency
12
Lining up for EU Membership: current
candidate countries and potential
candidates
By Philipp Dette and Barbara Ojeda Corominas,
Directorate of the Presidency
20
Retrospective reflections on the ECA
meta-audit on the Western Balkans
By Marton Baranyi, Investment for Cohesion,
Growth and Inclusion Directorate
Auditing Turkey: from EU pre-
accession to migration management
By Alejandro Ballester Gallardo, Directorate
External Action, Security and Justice
A man, a dog and an EU-funded four-
wheel drive: auditing in the field
By Jussi Bright, Investment for Cohesion,
Growth and Inclusion Directorate
SIGMA fostering strong public
institutions towards EU membership
By Bianca Brétéché, SIGMA Programme at the
OECD
EIB in the Western Balkans: how the
EU Bank helps countries towards
accession and EU integration
By Matteo Rivellini, Lending Operations
in Slovenia, Croatia and Western Balkans,
European Investment Bank
44
35
The EBRD and the road to EU
accession
By Zsuzsanna Hargitai, Western Balkans
Directorate of the EBRD
‘Enlargement process as occasion for
the EU to reinvent and reform itself’
Interview with David McAllister, Member of
the European Parliament
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the
Presidency
Capacity building in EU candidate
countries in the area of financial
control: some personal experiences
and thoughts
By Jan Pieter Lingen, expert on capacity
building in EU candidate countries
The Western Balkans parallel
performance audit project: boosting
regional cooperation between national
audit offices
By Jussi Bright, Investment for Cohesion, Growth
and Inclusion Directorate
‘How EU Pre-accession
Aid helped our SAI to shape its future
Interview with Bujar Leskaj, President of
ALSAI, Albania’s Supreme Audit Institution
By Derek Meijers, Directorate of the Presidency
23
38
08
Perspective of EU membership
27
41
29
32
DIRECTOR'S CUT
16
How to make pre-accession aid a
success?
Interview with Philippe Froidure,
ECA Director of the External Action,
Security and Justice Directorate
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the
Presidency
48
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3
PRODUCTION
Editor in Chief:
Gaston Moonen
Tel.:
+352 4398 - 45716
23
Auditing Turkey: from EU pre-accession
to migration management
By Alejandro Ballester Gallardo,
External Action, Security and Justice Directorate
38
INTERVIEW
David McAllister, Member of the European
Parliament
E-mail:
[email protected]
[email protected]
Layout, distribution:
Directorate of the Presidency
Photos:
Reproduction prohibited
© ECA
© European Union, 2018
Reproduction is authorised
provided the source is
acknowledged
‘Enlargement process as occasion
for the EU to reinvent and reform
itself’
41
Capacity building in EU candidate
countries in the area of financial
control: some personal experiences
and thoughts
By Jan Pieter Lingen, expert on capacity
building in EU candidate countries
The contents
of the interviews and the articles
are the sole responsibility
of the interviewees and authors
and do not necessarily
reflect the opinion of the
European Court of Auditors
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
REACHING OUT
65
The Summer School in public
auditing and accountability -
auditors and academics exploring
data analytics continued
By Gilberto Moggia, Information, Workplace
and Innovation Directorate
51
Audit authority on IPA funds:
helping the country to move towards
accessions
Interview with Adem Curi, Director of the
Audit Authority for the audit of IPA in the
former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the
Presidency
ECA’s contribution to capacity
building in candidate country SAIs:
providing internships to share good
practice
By Michael Pyper, Translation, Language
Services and Publication Directorate
ECA traineeship for auditors of
candidate countries: a portal for
professional development and…
a return to the ECA
By Jolita Korzuniene, Investment for Cohesion,
Growth and Inclusion Directorate, and Tomas
Mackevičius, Private Office of Rimantas Šadžius,
ECA Member
Roots of the cooperation between
ECA and candidate countries’ SAIs:
it all started in the mid-1990s
Interview with Dirk Pauwels,Private Office
of Danièle Lamarque, ECA Member
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the
Presidency
European Court of Auditors
12, rue Alcide De Gasperi
1615 Luxembourg,
LUXEMBOURG
[email protected]
Past editions of the Journal
can be found on ECA’s website:
eca.europa.eu/en/Pages/Journal.aspx
54
FOCUS
68
ECA
Publications in
July-September 2018
58
eca.europa.eu
2
@EUauditors
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4
Editorial
Accession and what the EU stands for
Growing together: enlargement – a key ingredient of the EU peace project
or
a positive sum
game.
This kind of illuminating messages appears when you search on the European
Commission’s website for information on enlargement. From a historical perspective, the
EU enlargement process is indeed impressive. It has resulted in a Union of Member States
that have almost doubled in number since 2004, with the last accession – Croatia – dating
back to five years ago. This ‘doubling’ also required new approaches for assisting and
guiding this enlargement process, not only because of the sheer size of the enlargement
but also because of the different situations many of the (potential) candidate countries
of 2004 faced compared with previous accessions. The EU developed pre-accession
instruments to help these countries on their path to democracy and a functioning market
economy, with stable institutions guaranteeing certain rights and a private sector able
to compete properly. Instruments that had to be accounted for, ensuring that these
countries arrived where they were meant to be and the intended effects were achieved in
a sustainable way. 
I participated as an auditor in on-the-spot visits which contributed to this accountability
process. I recall that, during one of my visits to Montenegro, in 2003, a major concern
was in the area of corruption and organised crime. In 15 years, things have changed to
the positive. Nowadays the news about Montenegro is much more appealing:
Welcome
to Montenegro and enjoy. Where all good things come in small packages.
And this small
country on the Mediterranean coast seems to be the first candidate country in the line to
join the EU, having risen through the ranks of ‘third country,’ ‘potential candidate country,’
‘candidate country,’ to eventually become – envisaged for the future - ‘EU Member State.’
What makes it so appealing for a country to move up in that ranking? Or, as I heard it put
more bluntly during an audit visit to Serbia about 15 years ago: ‘Why change the old five-
year plans from communist times for seven-year plans from Brussels?’ The question is all
the more pertinent in the light of the Copenhagen criteria, referred to regularly elsewhere
in this Journal, which are not easy to meet. These criteria represent conditions which many
countries strive to fulfil one way or the other. As I see it, these criteria stand for certain
values. Apparently, many citizens feel that these values are better protected under an EU
umbrella than only by a national constitution… and national actions. Because, no matter
how well these values may be reflected in a constitution, will and stamina are needed to
live up to them. This is what citizens expect from politicians when they elect them and
express their choice in favour of EU accession.
How important this political will is comes out clearly in a number of reports, by the ECA
and the European Commission, and in analyses by other experts in the field. The political
will to accomplish the actions required to meet the Copenhagen criteria is a key element,
if not THE key element on the road to accession. Such political will is not always easy to put
into practice. But as Nelson Mandela once put it: ‘Real leaders must be ready to sacrifice all
for the freedom of their people.’ 
We have made EU Pre-accession Aid the main theme of this Journal. Not least because
looking into this topic also reveals which core values the EU stands for and what efforts
(potential) candidate countries undertake to meet the expectations the EU has of potential
Member States. The EU‘s Pre-accession Aid not only relates to tangible issues, like building
roads and bridges, which are relatively easy to address. Building the political infrastructure
to meet and uphold the Copenhagen criteria is significantly more challenging. Creating
a market economy that really works and institutions which have the status, means and
independence to meet the Copenhagen obligations towards citizens takes time and
perseverance. In the end, the strength of a democracy depends on the political and
economic freedom of its citizens. The ambition to achieve that freedom is something
political leaders should keep in mind in their efforts towards accession, while taking
comfort in the examples provided by the history of EU enlargement. After all, it always
seems impossible until it is done.
Gaston Moonen
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5
Political will
is essential
for accession
progress
Interview with
Bettina Jakobsen,
ECA Member
By Gaston Moonen,
Directorate of the Presidency
During the past few years, the ECA has published several reports assessing the results and impact
of EU Pre-accession Aid. The most recent one, special report 7/2018 on pre-accession assistance
to Turkey, published in March, has received considerable public interest. Bettina Jakobsen was the
ECA’s reporting Member for this report. In this interview, she gives her views on accession in general
and in particular on auditing the topic, and on the ECA’s role, as the EU’s external auditor, in the
accession process.
Pre-accession aid compared with other EU external actions
Bettina Jakobsen joined in the ECA in 2015. Earlier this year, she
became the Dean of the chamber responsible for auditing EU external
action, security and justice. Referring to the increasing importance
of external action, she says: ‘You can see that in the proposals for the
next Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), the areas audited by the
chamber are getting really high on the political agenda. Our audit tasks
are going into new areas, such as cyber security and defence, making it a
very interesting chamber to work in.’
In speaking about EU Pre-accession Aid, she makes clear what she sees as
the key issue: ‘I think pre-accession aid is an investment in other countries
as well as an investment in Europe. In the EU we would like to screen
the countries we invite into the EU project and make sure they reach
a certain level of development, making them fit for EU membership.
The investment we make in the candidate countries not only benefits
the citizens of these countries, it also aims at preserving the present
Members’ interest in the continuous commitment to and proliferation of
fundamental ideas about human rights, rule of law, freedom of speech,
transparency, administrative capacity, etc. I think it is an important
process – assessing whether they are in line with the Copenhagen
criteria, and then inviting them into ‘good company’, if I may say so.’
In the EU we would like
to screen the countries
we invite into the EU
project and make sure
they reach a certain
level of development,
making them fit for EU
membership.
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Interview with Bettina Jakobsen, ECA Member
continued
6
The Copenhagen criteria, defined in 1993, are the rules that define whether a country
is eligible to join the European Union. They start with political criteria for guarantees for
democracy, human rights and the rule of law. Another key criteria is to have a functioning
market economy. The final key criteria is to have the administrative and institutional
capacity to take on the obligations of EU membership.
ECA and assessing the readiness of candidate countries
When asked about the ECA’s role in assessing compliance with the
Copenhagen criteria, the ECA Member is clear: ‘The ECA does not provide an
opinion on whether candidate countries meet the accession criteria. Whether
new EU Members are ready to be admitted is a political decision. As auditors,
we provide information to the Parliament, the Commission and the Council
on the status of development. In the end, the political authorities at both EU
and national level take the decision on enlargement.’ She adds, referring to the
recent report on pre-accession assistance to Turkey: ‘Of course, you will find
polite audit language in our reports. But if you read carefully, we say that the
situation does not look good. We indicate that most chapters have not been
closed, that fundamental requirements have often not been met. And that
there is a risk of backsliding.’ She observes that closing only one chapter is not
much progress, adding: ‘There is actually not much to tick off as done.’
On a more positive note, she mentions that the various audit reports
published on pre-accession aid do show that the European Commission has
become more and more skilled in terms of setting up the accession criteria,
knowing what to measure and the conditions that are key to the process. ‘We
have helped them – I hope - and the budgetary authority to better focus EU
support.’
Administrative capacity often depends on political will
A red thread running through several of the ECA reports on pre-accession
aid iA recurring theme running through several of the ECA’s reports on
pre-accession aid is administrative capacity, or sometimes the lack thereof.
However, how does one audit something that is much less tangible than, for
example, an infrastructure project? Bettina Jakobsen underlines the need for
educated policy officers, informed and independent judges and points out
that several ECA reports conclude that, in relation to administrative capacity,
measurable indicators (needed to measure performance) have not always
been well developed. ‘But we also find the same thing in many reports on EU
actions within the EU. Lack of clear objectives and measurable indicators are
typical findings in our reports in general, not only in relation to the Instrument
for Pre-accession Assistance (IPA).’
For Bettina Jakobsen, administrative capacity and political will are often
interlinked in the ECA’s reports on pre-accession. ‘Political will is a common
thread and a pre-condition for building up administrative capacity. With
the latter comes also the ability to initiate and absorb funding required for
further changes. In our special report 7/2018 regarding pre-accession aid to
Turkey, this was an important finding.’ As regards ways the Commission can
use its influence to stimulate change in the candidate countries, to bring
about political will, she refers to conditionality as one means. ‘Sometimes,
the Commission has used the tool of suspending payments or asking for
improvements before it releases funding. And in some cases, for example in
The ECA does not
provide an opinion
on whether candidate
countries meet the
accession criteria.
Whether new EU
Members are ready to
be admitted is a political
decision.
... if you read carefully,
we say that the situation
does not look good.
Lack of clear objectives
and measurable
indicators are typical
findings in our reports
in general, not only
in relation to the
Instrument for Pre-
accession Assistance
(IPA).
Political will is a
common thread
and a pre-condition
for building up
administrative capacity.
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Interview with Bettina Jakobsen, ECA Member
continued
7
relation to Turkey, the Commission has followed our recommendation and
decided not to pay out the performance award. In addition, it can use political
dialogue to advocate certain principles. But as several of our reports have
shown, establishing rule of law is very difficult if there is no political will.’
As regards the ECA’s recent special report on Turkey, she stresses that it has
received a lot of interest from the media. ‘And we have just received the
draft conclusions from the Council, which are also very supportive of our
recommendations. Let’s hope this somehow translates into concrete actions.’
The European Parliament (EP), too, has shown great interest in the report:
‘I gave a presentation to the Budgetary Control Committee (CONT), and
Members of the European Parliament, such as Claudia Schmidt, were very
positive, particularly in the support of our critical findings. She has clearly got
the message on ‘backsliding’. The ECA Member adds that the special report
will be taken into account in the discharge process. She concludes: ‘I think
it is very important to bring reports like this to the Parliament, including in
specialised committees.’
Taking the issue of political will even further, it could also be raised in relation
to EU Member States: whether a lack of political will to continue to uphold
the Copenhagen criteria could be a topic for an ECA audit. Bettina Jakobsen
indicates that she has come across the idea of country audits on Member
States during her interaction with the European Parliament. After all, the
ECA has done audits on candidate countries and assessed whether budget
support to non-EU countries has achieved the desired effects, so why not a
country audit on an EU Member State. Bettina Jakobsen takes the following
view on this: ‘It is up to the political system to hold the Member States
accountable for whether they meet requirements on – for example – having
an independent judicial system, and whether certain Treaty articles should be
invoked.’
Outlook for audits and key element for progress… not only on pre-
accession
Asked what her Audit Chamber will do in the future in terms of auditing pre-
accession aid, Bettina Jakobsen points out that this depends on many factors.
‘We always try to look widely on potential policy areas, requests from the
Parliament, risks, financial importance, etc. We have issued several reports
on pre-accession aid during the past few years, ranging from Montenegro
to Turkey, including special report 21/2016 – the meta audit on the Western
Balkans. We try to maintain a certain level of coverage of pre-accession aid
and, at some point, some of these reports may be relevant for a follow-up
audit. We tend to do a follow-up audit three years after. But we have many
competing areas and topics deserving our attention, especially in the area of
security and justice, like border control, hot spots and other migration-related
issues.’
Of all the main challenges the EU faces vis-à-vis the candidate countries, then,
Bettina Jakobsen highlights one in particular: political will. ‘Political will is the
essential and visible commitment to fulfil the conditions you have agreed to.
If you have a stable government, backing the intention to seek admission to
the EU, then you are on the way. I was also the reporting Member for special
report 15/2018 on strengthening the capacity of the internal security forces
in Niger and Mali, which we published in June. In this audit, too, we saw that
political will means everything.’
But as several of our
reports have shown,
establishing rule of law
is very difficult if there is
no political will.
... we have many
competing areas and
topics deserving our
attention...
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8
By
Source:
European Commission
Perspective of EU
membership important
driver for progress
and reconciliation in
Western Balkans
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the Presidency
Within the European Commission DG NEAR
is responsible for EU actions towards EU
neighbourhood countries, and countries
covered by the EU enlargement process.
Christian Danielsson is Director-General of DG
NEAR since 2013 and has a long experience
regarding EU accession, already working
on this issue when posted in the ministry of
Foreign Affairs of Sweden. Below his views on
changes in the accession process throughout
the years, what the current main issues are,
how to address them and the EU’s role and
means in doing so.
Interview with Christian Danielsson, Director-General of DG NEAR of the European Commission
Accession process has become more demanding
What the main differences are between the enlargement preparations leading to the big enlargement in
2004 and subsequent accessions?
Based on our experience from the 2004 enlargement and subsequent accessions, the Commission
has introduced a new approach to accession negotiations. The new ‘fundamentals first’ approach
entails prioritising reforms in key areas like the rule of law, economic governance and public
administration reform. This helps the aspiring member states tackle these crucial issues early on
and strengthens the overall credibility of negotiations.
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Interview with Christian Danielsson,
Director-General of DG NEAR of the European Commission
continued
9
The accession process today is more demanding than in the past. The
introduction of opening, interim and closing benchmarks for the key
rule of law chapters – in other words, formal conditions to be met to
move to the next negotiations phase – -made the process more rigorous
and structured. This to help the countries tackle in a more solid and
systematic way the difficult challenges they face in their reform efforts.
However, nothing has changed in terms of the core principles. The
enlargement policy and preparations for accession are based on the
same well-established criteria to join the EU. They were defined already
in 1993 at the European Council in Copenhagen and applied both to
the 2004 enlargement and subsequent enlargement negotiations:
having stable institutions guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law,
human rights and respect for and protection of minorities; a functioning
market economy; the ability to take on and implement effectively
the obligations of membership. One difference in this respect is that
additional conditions for membership have been set out for the Western
Balkans in the stabilisation and association process, mostly relating to
regional cooperation and good neighbourly relations.
What are in your view the three core tasks of DG NEAR in the current
enlargement discussions with candidate and potential candidate countries?
Firstly, DG NEAR assists the countries with a perspective to join the
EU in meeting the membership criteria. This means managing the
bilateral relations of the Union with candidate countries and potential
candidates, frontloading reforms on the rule of law, economic
governance and public administration reform. Our DG also develops
and implements the stabilisation and association process to prepare
the Western Balkans for future membership. Secondly, DG NEAR closely
monitors the progress of enlargement countries towards the EU and
supports accession negotiations as required by the Council. And thirdly,
we manage the bulk of the Union’s financial and technical assistance to
the enlargement countries (IPA).
Enlargement as a credible perspective
What would you consider the biggest challenge for the upcoming years
for your DG to meet expectations from both candidate countries…and
Member States and their citizens?
I think the biggest challenge in the coming years will be to help
alleviate the concerns about possible future enlargements. We can do
it by helping the countries to deliver on reforms and to complete their
political, economic and social transformation. This is the only way to
ensure citizens' trust and confidence when it comes to the benefits of
having a bigger European Union.
The 2004 and 2007 enlargements were seen as an enormous leap forward
for both the EU and the countries concerned. But in hindsight some scholars
and also politicians involved have argued that not all countries were ready
for joining in the sense of being ready for all the enlargement chapters
concerned. How does the Commission ensure that accountability of what
has been achieved, both by the Commission and the countries themselves,
can be properly assessed by the European Parliament and the Council?
First let me stress one thing: we are not talking about admitting to the
EU the enlargement countries of today – they are obviously not ready.
The enlargement policy
and preparations for
accession are based on
the same well-established
criteria to join the EU.
... ensure citizens' trust
and confidence when it
comes to the benefits of
having a bigger European
Union.
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Interview with Christian Danielsson,
Director-General of DG NEAR of the European Commission
continued
10
Enlargement can only happen once there's solid evidence the country
can respect EU values and standards, and we will not accept any
shortcomings or allow shortcuts.
The principle of own merits and strict but fair conditionality is applied
at all stages of the accession process. The Commission's positions and
recommendations are based on full assessment of the relevant facts
and the individual merit of the countries concerned in meeting the
membership criteria. At each stage of the process, the Commission’s
position contributes to a discussion among the EU Member States,
each of which in turn contributes its views and perspectives before
drawing conclusions collectively as a Union. The European Parliament
is regularly informed about the developments in the enlargement area,
and its opinions and recommendations are duly taken into account in
policy design and assessment of progress. One of our flagship products
– the annual enlargement package- is the best example of this process.
It does not gloss over shortcomings. It provides a balanced assessment
of the countries’ reform efforts and an objective reference point for
civil society to follow the developments and put pressure on their
governments.
Flagship initiatives to prioritise key issues
When reading the 2018 communication of the Commission on EU
Enlargement Policy, issued in April this year, the first concerns raised relate
to the rule of law – including comments on the judicial system, corruption
and organised crime – fundamental rights, functioning of democratic
institutions and migration issues. These appear to be issues which are
mostly in the hands of candidate countries and potential candidate
countries themselves. How does DG NEAR intend to influence these issues,
the more since building up administrative capacity is not done overnight?
Indeed, the pace of transformation depends on the countries’ progress
in implementing reforms. We continue to support and guide them, but
this is in the first place their work and their responsibility.
The Commission’s Western Balkans Strategy of 6 February 2018 puts
forward concrete and tailor made actions in key areas of mutual
interest, ‘flagship initiatives,’ which include the rule of law and
migration. DG NEAR intends to intensify efforts to guide reforms and
to support the ambitious steps taken by the countries themselves
in these areas. This means increased help in prioritising key issues,
close monitoring of reform implementation, as well as more strategic
financial and technical assistance.
One of the audit findings in the ECA meta audit on the Western Balkans
(special report 21/16) and the ECA special report on EU pre-accession
assistance to Turkey (special report 7/18) was that for the ‘rule of law’
projects the Commission had not applied conditions consistently. And
relatively little funding had been provided in key areas, such as media
freedom, public prosecution and the fight against corruption and
organised crime. Last week the ECA issued a report looking into the
European Commission oversight of Member States’ application of EU
Law. One of the key recommendations in this recent ECA report is that
the Commission needs to further strengthen its oversight of the way EU
law is applied in Member States. Do you consider this oversight also a key
attention point for DG NEAR vis-à-vis candidate countries?
Enlargement can only happen
once there's solid evidence the
country can respect EU values
and standards, and we will
not accept any shortcomings
or allow shortcuts.
One of our flagship products
– the annual enlargement
package - [...] does not gloss
over shortcomings.
... the pace of transformation
depends on the countries’
progress in implementing
reforms. [...] this is in the first
place their work and their
responsibility.
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Interview with Christian Danielsson,
Director-General of DG NEAR of the European Commission
continued
11
We believe the conditionality was applied at the appropriate level
to achieve the maximum impact possible, in often difficult political
contexts. With regard to funding levels, you need to take into account
also the absorption capacity on the ground, and that the areas you
mention not always require large-scale investments but are often
supported through the provision of technical assistance, hence
consuming lower budgets.
The candidate countries must deliver concrete and sustainable results in
the reform process and progressively apply the EU law. The Commission
has been strengthening the tools to monitor this process. For example,
very detailed action plans in the area of the rule of law help us better
monitor and report on the implementation of the
acquis
in this area. We
also check the real application of the law on the ground, for example by
conducting case-based peer reviews. We are also helping to strengthen
the capacity of civil society in the countries to monitor the application of
EU law.
Lessons learnt reflected in the next Multiannual Financial
Framework
The EU has a long history of enlargement and is indicated on the DG NEAR
website as a ‘positive sum game.’ What do you consider to be the key lessons
learnt for the Commission and what is in your opinion the biggest success
until now under your watch as Director-General?
One of the lessons learnt for us is the importance of deep sustainable
reforms for a truly credible enlargement process for the Western
Balkans. The region has still to implement fundamental reforms in
crucial areas like the rule of law or economy, and must redouble efforts
on reconciliation. The EU’s engagement has confirmed to be a real
driver for this process. Most recently, the successful reinvigoration of
the enlargement perspective for the Western Balkans through the very
forward-looking Commission’s Western Balkans Strategy of 6 February
2018 and the historic EU-Western Balkans Summit in Sofia on 17 May
2018 have been key drivers for renewed momentum. I hope this will
translate into a continued impetus for reforms in the region.
We have also certainly looked very carefully into the implementation of
our pre-accession financial assistance for
2014-2020 (IPA II) and have reflected lessons learnt in our proposal for
IPA III for 2021-2028: we need a more strategic approach to financial
assistance, greater ownership from the countries and a programming
that is rewarding performance and progress.
We also check the real
application of the law on
the ground,...
The region has still to
implement fundamental
reforms in crucial areas like
the rule of law or economy,
and must redouble efforts
on reconciliation.
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12
Lining up for EU Membership: current
candidate countries and potential
candidates
By Philipp Dette and Barbara Ojeda Corominas, Directorate of the Presidency
This year, we celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome. In January 1958, the
European Economic Community came into being, with Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg,
France, Italy and West Germany as original Member States. Over the years, many other countries
have joined, and membership in what later became the European Union (EU) has grown from
the original six to the current 28 Member States. How does the process of joining the European
Union work? Despite the imminent prospect of the UK leaving the EU, and the last accession
dating back to 2013 (Croatia), this is still a relevant question. In fact, several countries are keen
to join the EU. Philipp Dette and Barbara Ojeda Corominas, both from the Directorate of the
Presidency, give an overview of the process and of the current status of negotiations with
candidates and potential candidates for EU accession.
Steps of accession and requirements for joining
A country that wishes to become an EU Member State starts with the status of ‘potential
candidate’. When the European Commission considers that preparations are sufficiently
advanced, the country can then become an official candidate, but only once the EU
Council has reached unanimous agreement. Formal membership negotiations, known as
‘accession negotiations’, can then start.
A fundamental requirement for becoming an EU Member State is compliance with all
current EU rules (the so-called
acquis),
which are divided into 35 chapters. The negotiation
chapters cover the whole spectrum of policy areas, ranging from the four freedoms to
other agreements such as science, research and the environment. The negotiations are
mainly about how and when the rules are adopted and implemented. Conditions are the
same for everyone, meaning that a country cannot pick and choose which parts of EU
legislation it will apply, although transitional periods may apply for certain aspects.
At the political level, the most important requirements are laid out in the Copenhagen
Criteria. First, a candidate country must have stable institutions guaranteeing democracy,
the rule of law, human rights and respect for minorities. Second, it must have a
functioning market economy and the capacity to cope with competition in the EU. Lastly,
it must have the ability to take on and implement the obligations of membership of the
European Union.
Within each negotiation chapter, a candidate country's current situation is assessed,
and then the country and the EU agree on their respective positions. Each chapter is
subsequently negotiated and can be closed separately. All agreed chapters are then
embedded into an accession treaty, which has to be ratified by the candidate country and
by all other EU Member States. During the negotiation process, the candidate country is
continuously monitored by the European Commission and receives guidance on its path
to becoming an EU Member.
Status of negotiations
Two countries – Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo* – are currently potential candidate
countries, while Albania, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia
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Lining up for EU Membership: current candidate countries and potential candidates
continued
13
and Turkey are candidate countries. For three out of these five candidate countries,
negotiations have already started. So far, the greatest progress has been achieved in
Montenegro, with three out of 35 chapters provisionally closed and 31 chapters already
opened. Montenegro is also part of a visa liberalisation scheme for the Schengen area,
where tourist travel is visa-free for up to 90 days. In the negotiations with Serbia, two
chapters have been closed and 14 chapters opened. Like Montenegro, Serbia is also part
of the visa liberalisation scheme.
In the case of Turkey, the negotiations are difficult and agreements are hard to achieve,
not least due to the recent political and diplomatic tensions between the EU, its Member
States and Turkey. So far, only one chapter (‘Science and Research’) seems ready to be
closed. In view of this situation, there is even debate about whether the possibility of
EU membership for Turkey should be dismissed completely. Of the 15 chapters that are
currently open, negotiations have already lasted for more than 10 years, with no realistic
prospect in some cases of reaching agreement. Of all the current candidate countries,
Turkey is the one that has received the largest amount of EU pre-accession aid. At the
same time, it has the highest GDP per capita of the seven other countries.
Comparison of key data on candidate countries and potential candidates
The map and tables below provides key information about candidate and potential
candidate countries in terms of population, GDP per capita, democracy ranking, human
development ranking and the amount of pre-accession aid received in 2017. The data
show that there are significant differences between the seven candidate and potential
candidate countries.
Outlook
The road ahead for EU enlargement is not easy. Some say that the next wave of
enlargement should happen by 2025, since there is currently a window of opportunity for
the Balkan states, and recent words by Commission President Juncker have given hope to
some countries for this ambitious accession calendar. However, many challenges remain,
not least the fact that Serbia and five EU Member States have not recognised Kosovo.
Additional border disputes in the Balkans could also hold back potential enlargement.
And for some (potential) candidate countries, the European Parliament has expressed
concern about progress on the fight against corruption and organised crime.
On the positive side, there are also favourable signs: progress towards resolving the
name issue between Macedonia and Greece, and the continued transformation of local
systems towards fulfilling the criteria for EU membership. Incentives are also provided
by the new Instrument of Pre-accession Aid, IPA III, as included in the Multiannual
Financial Framework proposals for 2021-2028. The priorities of the new IPA are rule of law,
fundamental rights, good relations between neighbours, regional cooperation and many
other aspects. With well-framed funding and clear incentives for candidate countries to
resolve their issues, some countries might be further along the road to accession than
many people expect.
* This designation is without prejudice on status and is in line with UNSCR 1244 and the International Court of
Justice opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence.
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14
European Union
Population in millions
(2016)
GDP per capita (2017)
(exchange rate 1
USD = 0,85 euro)
Democracy Index
ranking (2017)
Human development
index ranking
511,8
Average:
31.115
Ranking from
3 (Sweden) to
64 (Romania)
Ranging from
4 (Ireland) to
52 (Romania)
Level of Pre-accession Not
aid in mio euro (2017) applicable
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Population in millions
(2016)
GDP per capita 2017
€;
also expressed as % of
EU average
Democracy Index
ranking (2017)
Human development
index ranking
Level of Pre-accession
aid in mio euro (2017)
3.517
4.728
(15%)
101
77
43.7
Montenegro
Population in millions
(2016)
GDP per capita 2017
€;
also expressed as % of
EU average
Democracy Index
ranking (2017)
Human development
index ranking
Level of Pre-accession
aid in mio euro (2017)
0,623
6.641
(21%)
83
50
39.5
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15
Source: ECA, based on Eurostat
Serbia
Population in millions
(2016)
GDP per capita 2017
€;
also expressed as % of
EU average
Democracy Index
ranking (2017)
Human development
index ranking
Level of Pre-accession
aid in mio euro (2017)
7.057
5.094
(16%)
66
67
215.4
former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia
Population in millions
(2016)
GDP per capita 2017
€;
also expressed as % of
EU average
Democracy Index
ranking (2017)
Human development
index ranking
Level of Pre-accession
aid in mio euro (2017)
Albania
Population in millions
(2016)
GDP per capita (2017)
€;
also expressed as % of
EU average
Democracy Index
ranking (2017)
Human development
index ranking
Level of Pre-accession
aid in mio euro (2017)
2.876 m
3.969
(13%)
77
68
92.9
2.081
4.459
(14%)
88
80
94.9
Kosovo *
Population in
millions (2016)
GDP per capita 2017
€;
also expressed as
% of EU average
Democracy Index
ranking (2017)
Human development
index ranking
Level of Pre-
accession aid in mio
euro (2017)
1.816
3.458 (11%)
Not
applicable
Not
applicable
91.9
Turkey
Population in millions
(2016)
GDP per capita 2017
€;
also expressed as % of
EU average
Democracy Index
ranking (2017)
Human development
index ranking
Level of Pre-accession
aid in mio euro (2017)
79.51
12.695
(40%)
100
64
636.4
*This designation is without prejudice
on status and is in line with UNSCR 1244
and the International Court of Justice
opinion on the Kosovo declaration of
independence.
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16
How to make
pre-accession
aid a success?
Interview with Philippe Froidure,
ECA Director of the External Action,
Security and Justice Directorate
DIRECTOR’S CUT
Vítor Caldeira
As early as 1993, the EU has set up pre-accession programmes to help
candidate countries meeting the accession criteria. Over the years,
and the successive enlargements of the EU, the Commission has
redesigned and overhauled these programmes several times. Within
the ECA Philippe Froidure has assessed most, if not all of them. He has
done so in different functions, and for the last decade as director of the
Audit chamber in charge of examining, among other areas, accession
aid. In this interview, Philippe shares some of his reflections on the
specificities of examining EU accession aid and the future need for
audits in this area.
By Gaston Moonen,
Directorate of the Presidency
Painting the picture: evolution of EU Pre-accession Aid since the 1990s
Philippe Froidure clearly has a lot of experience in examining EU Pre-
accession Aid. This does not only come out from his CV but also when he
talks about the topic, with full enthusiasm. During the interview, he pointed
to ECA audit reports from the 1990s on this topic to underline some of
the findings he considers most important. Philippe was involved from the
beginning when the ECA started to examine accession-related instruments.
He explains: ‘Actually, the ECA started its audit work in this domain in 1994.
The division in charge was vested in what was then called Audit Group
II and which was at the same time responsible for the banking activities,
mainly deriving from the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) Treaty.
Later on, the division was split which resulted in the creation of the ’PECO’
(Pays d’Europe Centrale et Orientale) division, dealing with the PHARE –
originally standing for ‘Poland and Hungary: Assistance for Restructuring
their Economies’ - instrument for the Pre-accession countries, and the
TACIS instrument for the Community of Independent States, following the
collapse of the Soviet Union. TACIS stood for ‘Technical Assistance to the
Commonwealth of Independent States’ and ran until 2007.’
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Interview with Philippe Froidure, ECA Director of the External Action, Security and Justice
Directorate
continued
17
From the historical picture Philippe Froidure paints, it becomes clear that the
EU support was essentially sectoral, focused vertically, directly related to the
Copenhagen criteria (see box), the chapters of the acquis and to the setup of an
administration and its ability to handle crucial EU matters.
The Copenhagen criteria, defined in 1993, are the rules that define whether a country is
eligible to join the European Union. They start with political criteria for guarantees for
democracy, human rights and the rule of law. Another key criteria is to have a functioning
market economy. The final key criteria is to have the administrative and institutional capacity
to take on the obligations of EU membership.
Philippe points out that it meant that the EU provided its support, for instance,
to the privatisation of state-owned companies, statistical offices, the customs
administration, the tax administration, SMEs, cross-border infrastructures. ‘Every
programme was managed within an ad-hoc entity, a Programme Management
Unit (PMU). The DG in charge of the Pre-accession could find inside expertise
for the diagnosis and the design of the thematic supports in some other
DGs of the European Commission, like TAXUD and EUROSTAT, except for the
Public Administration. That is why the Commission turned itself towards the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, the OECD, which
had a division called PUMA, focusing on Public Management matters. This
resulted in the creation of the SIGMA – standing for Support for Improvement in
Governance and Management – a programme managed by the OECD and the
Commission and still on going.’
This all had consequences for the audits, he explains, with the audits privileging
thematic or systems approaches: ‘For instance, we had special reports on the
private sector development, on the time management of the programmes,
on the tendering procedures, those kind of topics.’ For the ECA director it
was the wish of the Commission to take into consideration the constraints
related to the EU membership and to the management of major funds, which
triggered the launch of two additional instruments: SAPARD for the rural
development and ISPA, for the structural funds. He continues: ‘The last element
in the evolution comes back to a single instrument: the Instrument for Pre-
accession Assistance (IPA). The support is currently provided under the second
version of this instrument (IPA II) and a third version is under finalisation for
the next Multiannual Financial Framework. On the institutional side, things
have also changed with the creation of the European External Action Service
and, under the Juncker Commission, with a move from a specific enlargement
DG (DG ELARG) to a DG (DG NEAR) responsible for both Pre-accession and
Neighbourhood policies.’
Political will of candidate country key element in accession process
When asked what kept him in this field in view of his long track record in the
area, he answers without any hesitation: ‘Not only but I would say primarily:
the EU proximity. Major events took and still take place in this geographical
area and these countries may become part of the Union. All that leverages the
interest. In my view pre-accession is a very lively process with a geopolitical
context continuously evolving. The fact is that, after the first major enlargement
in 2004, the second one in 2007 and the last one in 2013 with Croatia, many
serious challenges still existed and new ones appeared both internally - notably
the governance of the EU - and externally as I mentioned earlier. De facto, these
[In the past] Every
programme was
managed within an
ad-hoc entity, ...
The last element in the
evolution comes back
to a single instrument:
the Instrument for Pre-
accession Assistance
(IPA).
... pre-accession is a
very lively process with
a geopolitical context
continuously evolving.
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Interview with Philippe Froidure, ECA Director of the External Action, Security and Justice
Directorate
continued
18
challenges slowed down the accession process, and raised important questions,
increasing - as I see it - the interest for the domain.'
Going at a deeper, more detailed level, Philippe Froidure explains that the most
critical areas for IPA assistance depend on the situation of each country. ‘For
example, governance was identified by the Commission as the most challenging
are for Serbia, while the rule of law has been particularly challenging for
Kosovo, and more recently for Turkey.’ He points out that, putting aside the
specific areas, the political will of the country is the key element, not only in
the implementation of the measures and/or projects needed, but also for the
sustainability of the achievements in the long run. ‘As the example of Turkey has
shown, several years of progress can be endangered by a serious backsliding.
When there is lack of political will, actions may produce results that are not self-
sustainable and remain heavily donor-dependent.’
Philippe also provides some recommendations to trigger change. ‘For the
reasons I just mentioned, continuous policy dialogue and alignment of the
country’ political objectives remain a priority and should be the primary
instrument to ensure effectiveness of the actions and sustainability of the
results. A second option to accelerate improvements could be a stricter
definition and application of conditionality. As ECA, we highlighted this in our
special report 7/2018 on Turkey.’
He explains that under the IPA, conditionality can be used at political level,
through opening and closing benchmarks regarding accession negotiations,
as well as at project level. Then, with a certain twinkle in his eye, he continues:
‘At political level, the EU legislator has the power to reduce future assistance.
Under IPA I – we are now under IPA II - the Council could suspend IPA assistance
if the principles of democracy and the rule of law had not been complied with.’
He brings up that the European Parliament has called for a suspension of all
pre-accession funds if accession negotiations are suspended. ‘But we found that,
under IPA II, the EU legislator has not explicitly provided for such a possibility.
But the Commission does have some means related to conditionality to foster
reforms, like not transferring the full amount, - the so-called ‘performance
reward’- in the absence of good results, or take over the management of IPA
projects from national authorities.’
Auditing pre-accession aid: still enough work to be done
As to whether the ECA wants to cover all the candidate countries regularly
– almost cyclical – or whether other selection criteria prevail, perhaps even
specific to audit programming in this area, Philippe Froidure has a swift reply. ‘In
the early days, the idea was not to particularly go country per country. Instead,
the selection of the Pre-accession topics was based on criteria which are still
valid and used: such as previous coverage, risks and materiality, stakeholders’
interest and the potential added-value of the audit. As regards the volume of
audit work carried out, this was mainly determined by the number of available
auditors in the PECO division.’
He further explains that, following the changes in the programming procedure
and the administrative reform of the ECA organisation, there is now a more
global prioritisation, not only within an audit chamber, but also in principle at
the central ECA level. ‘Therefore, covering specific countries based on a cyclical
approach is not a sufficient justification as such. Additional selection criteria are
When there is lack of
political will, actions may
produce results that are
not self-sustainable and
remain heavily donor-
dependent.’
... continuous policy
dialogue and alignment
of the country’ political
objectives remain a
priority...
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Interview with Philippe Froidure, ECA Director of the External Action, Security and Justice
Directorate
continued
19
necessary and are applied in the pre-accession domain. Just think about issues
such as security, conflicts, migration … at the doorstep of the EU. Regarding
the current country audits, it is true that the aid modalities and management
modes foreseen in the IPA instrument have rendered the geographical approach
more relevant. For instance, EU budget support for a candidate country was not
possible under the PHARE instrument, while it is now possible under IPA.’
When asked about specific audit skills needed in this area, Philippe believes
that they are not very different from other policy areas. ‘You need strong
professionalism, good interpersonal skills, sound discernment and objective
judgment. There is no room for arrogance. Probably one should insist on the
need for the auditor to understand well the audited matter and the political
context. Indeed, the auditor must find its way in quite complex questions. Like
in other policy areas.’
Regarding future audits on pre-accession aid, Philippe Froidure believes there
is still enough work to be done for the ECA. ‘Normally, if a candidate country
becomes an EU Member State the audit work of EU activities goes to a different
Audit Chamber in the ECA. Let’s say the work in our directorate ‘disappears.’ But
the policy still concerns five candidate countries and two potential candidate
countries. Moreover, as I already mentioned, several challenges, both internally
and externally, related to this domain need to be addressed.’
... the aid modalities
and management
modes foreseen in
the IPA instrument
have rendered the
geographical approach
more relevant.
You need strong
professionalism, good
interpersonal skills,
sound discernment
and objective
judgment. There is no
room for arrogance.
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20
Retrospective
reflections
on the ECA
meta-audit on
the Western
Balkans
By Marton Baranyi, Investment for
Cohesion, Growth and Inclusion
Directorate
Source:
European Commission
September 2016 marked the publication of the ECA’s special report 21/2016 on the Western Balkans.
More specifically, it was the release of the meta-audit on the EU Commission’s management of pre-
accession assistance (IPA) to strengthen the administrative capacity in the historically and politically
fragile Western-Balkan region. Marton Baranyi worked on the audit and its presentation as attaché
in the private office of Szabolc Fazakas, then reporting Member for this report. He looks back, two
years after publication and after the annual summit of the Berlin Process in London, identifying a
number of takeaways from this performance audit even today.
Purpose of a meta-audit
Special report 21/2016 has as title ‘EU pre-accession assistance for
strengthening administrative capacity in the Western Balkans: A
meta-audit.’ So the report labels itself as a meta audit. It is obvious
what ‘meta’ means, ‘audit’ as well. But what is a ‘meta-audit’? This
term overs a special audit product at the crossroads of a landscape
review and a single-issue performance audit, covering a wide range
of issues and clearly aiming at making specific conclusions and
recommendations. In this specific case, the meta-audit on the Western
Balkans, led by then reporting Member Zsabolcs Fazakas and head
of task Dennis Wernerus, used already existing ECA Special Reports
of the past ten years - such as the special reports on CARDS, Serbia,
Kosovo*, Croatia etc. -, Commission evaluations and progress reports,
as well as independent expert reports. However, and this has to be
underlined, we also complemented the existing work of others with
new performance audit work. We assessed 52 national IPA projects in
the Western Balkans and three IPA multi-beneficiary programmes and
undertook audit visits at the EU Commission and delegations, as well
as to relevant ministries and IPA structures in the Western Balkans. The
particular focus of the new audit work was on results beyond outputs
in the field of rule of law and public administration reform. In this
regard, this meta-audit was a rather unique audit amongst the external
action related audits.
Example of a finding in the meta-
audit: IPA I project results in the
fight against corruption
Project against corruption, Albania
The purpose of the ‘Project against
corruption in Albania’ was to
support the Albanian government
in implementing its anti-corruption
strategy (2007-2013). Not only did
it fail to deliver on measurable
targets, but its sustainability was also
affected by the fact that the national
anti-corruption coordinator was not
independent and coordinated policies
at national and local level without
adequate budget or staff.
State Commission for Preventing
Corruption, the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia
This project aimed to strengthen the
work of the main body responsible
for preventing corruption. However,
it did not address the fact that the
State Commission for Preventing
Corruption was not in a position to
exercise its mandate effectively in
the face of inadequate commitment
by the national authorities, a lack
of independence on the part of its
senior management and insufficient
resources.
* This designation is without prejudice on status and is in line with UNSCR 1244 and
the International Court of Justice opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence.
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Retrospective reflections on the ECA meta-audit on the Western Balkans
continued
21
Presenting the meta-audit on the spot
Furthermore worth mentioning is that the special report had an
unusually wide coverage, not only in Brussels and in the media
focusing on EU affairs, but also in the Western Balkan region itself.
This was also due to the audit team’s efforts to present the report
not only to the usual institutional players like the Budgetary Control
Committee in the European Parliament and in the EP and the relevant
Council formation, but also to stakeholders on the spot. Therefore, we
the results of the meta audit for example during the European Union-
Serbia Stabilisation and Association Parliamentary Committee (SAPC)
meeting in Belgrade in September 2016, to the Regional Cooperation
Council (RCC) Board meeting in Sarajevo in October 2016 and to
Members of the Parliament of Montenegro in March 2017.
The role of a regional approach
The report’s politically perhaps most important message (and
last recommendation) is that the regional approach within the
pre-accession assistance should be further strengthened. This is
an extremely important recommendation for a region that is still
characterised by ethnical, religious, and social tensions, and which had
to endure hardship even in recent times due to the various crises linked
to politics, economics, and migration. Regional approach therefore
means that the EU does not support these countries exclusively on
a one-by-one approach, but also supports and encourages a holistic
regional approach within its pre-accession policy and funding.
Regional approach in this context means enhancing inter-connectivity,
regional cooperation, as well as strengthening administrative capacity
in the region as a whole, notably through the Berlin process (see
below) and several regional frameworks and organisations.
Luckily, there are already a number of regional initiatives in place, such
as the already mentioned RRCC and the Regional School of Public
Administration (ReSPA). The meta-audit covered these initiatives.
Moreover, the trend seems to be favouring this development in recent
years: the meta-audit reported that 23% share of the total IPA funding
for the 2007-2013 period was used for explicit regional programmes,
while this figure was 41.5% in 2017 alone.
Regional approach and the Berlin Process
Strengthening regional cooperation is also an important message of
the Berlin Process. This initiative, launched by the German Chancellor
Merkel in 2014, aims at stepping up regional cooperation in the
Western Balkans and aiding the integration of these countries into the
European Union. As the initiative officially states the process is taking
place with support of the European Commission, international financial
institutions and the Member States involved in the process – Austria,
Croatia, France, Germany, Italy, Slovenia and the United Kingdom. It is
Main conclusions of the meta-
audit
The ECA concluded that the EU
pre-accession assistance was
broadly effective and that IPA I, the
first ‘Instrument for Pre-accession
Assistance,’ partly strengthened
administrative capacity in the region,
despite considerable shortcomings
inherent to the national authorities in
the Western Balkans. With regard to
the Commission’s management, IPA
I objectives were not always specific
and measurable. Programmes and
projects were based on needs but
some beneficiaries’ assessments
in the rule of law sector showed
considerable shortcomings. The
absorption of IPA I funding was
hampered by weak administrative
capacity in some countries and, in the
case of decentralised implementation,
strict requirements linked to the
management of EU funds.
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Retrospective reflections on the ECA meta-audit on the Western Balkans
continued
22
supplementary to the individual countries’ institutional EU integration
process.
This year, the annual summit related to the Berlin Process took place
in July in London. Important to note is the Joint Declaration of the
summit’s leading participants says that further progress in developing
regional cooperation structures is welcome and commended. Without
overestimating the meta-audit’s importance, it is good to see that we
were thinking in the same direction as several leaders of the EU, namely
in the direction of the necessity of a holistic approach towards the
Western Balkans.
Signs of hope for a continueous peaceful neighbourship
It is clear that there is still a long way to go for the countries of the
Western Balkans on the path towards the EU. However, contrary to
previous times, where the difficulties prevailed, today, there are some
signs of hope for a peaceful settlement of at least some of the tensions.
These include solving the name debate at the upcoming referendum in
Macedonia on the country’s official name and the bilateral negotiations
on a peaceful land swap based on mutual understanding between
Serbia and Kosovo. From our side, with all these activities and regional
programmes, it seems rather likely that there will be another ECA audit
covering the Western Balkan region.
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23
Auditing Turkey: from EU pre-accession
to migration management
By Alejandro Ballester Gallardo,
External Action, Security and Justice Directorate
Turkey has been the largest recipient of the EU Instrument for Pre-accession
Assistance (IPA) since many years. More recently, the EU and Turkey signed an
agreement which provided additional financial support for Turkey hosting refugees
coming mostly from Syria. Alejandro Ballester Gallardo, principal manager at
the ECA who managed the recent performance audit of the IPA aid, explains
the differences and connections between the IPA instrument and the facility for
Refugees in Turkey, set up in 2016. Dennis Wernerus, currently heading the Private
Office of Annemie Turtelboom, ECA Member and previously head of task in the
audit of IPA in Turkey, provides details for the audit methodology used.
Why did the ECA audit Turkey?
Located at the crossroads between Europe and the Middle East, the
Republic of Turkey has been a candidate for EU membership since 1999.
With over € 9 billion from the Instrument for Pre-accession Assistance (IPA)
for the 2007-2020 period, Turkey is the main beneficiary country of EU aid
outside the EU.
Throughout this time, Turkey’s EU accession process has experienced
many ups and downs. Since the attempted military coup of July 2016,
when Turkey imposed a state of emergency and carried out extensive
dismissals and detentions, Turkey’s future accession to the EU has become
even more uncertain. In fact, in November 2016 the European Parliament
called on the Commission and the EU Member States to initiate a
temporary freeze in the ongoing accession negotiations with Turkey.
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Auditing Turkey: from EU pre-accession to migration anagement
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24
Also in 2016, the EU Heads of State and Turkey agreed on the EU-
Turkey statement. The aim of this political agreement was to end illegal
migration flows from Turkey into the EU. With the closure of Turkey’s
borders, the number of arrivals into the EU dropped by 97%. Turkey
actually hosts the largest refugee population in the world: nearly 4 million
people, 3.5 million of whom are Syrian. To help the Turkish government
address the basic needs of these refugees and their host communities,
the EU set up the Facility for Refugees in Turkey (FRiT) with an initial
budget of € 3 billion for the 2016-2017 period, and the possibility of a
further € 3 billion by the end of 2018.
Given the above, it is not surprising that the ECA’s work programme
included several audits related to Turkey, both as a candidate country
and as a key partner in migration management. This year was also the
right time to look at these areas, since our assessment of the effectiveness
of the IPA can shape the ongoing political debate about whether the
repressive post-coup measures in Turkey have resulted in backsliding
in the reform agenda that the EU has supported for the last 20 years.
Our report will also be of use for the European Commission’s mid-term
review of IPA II. Similarly, our assessment of the value-for-money of the
first tranche of the FRiT before the end of 2018 could help to improve the
design and implementation of the second tranche.
Two audit teams of four ECA auditors each (headed by Dennis Wernerus
and Cyril Messein) spent one year, including several weeks in Turkey,
meeting government authorities, the EU Delegation, other international
institutions (such as the UN), refugees, civil society organisations, and the
beneficiaries of a sample of 25 EU-funded projects across the country.
Auditing Turkey as a candidate country
Being the largest IPA beneficiary country, Turkey is frequently audited by
the ECA as part of its annual statement of assurance. For example, each
year since 2013 the ECA has audited the regularity of the construction,
service and work components of a total of 40 IPA projects. This means that
we already have extensive knowledge of the financial management of IPA
funds in Turkey. At the same time, our most recent performance audit of
the effectiveness of IPA funds in Turkey dates from 2009.
An important part of our work was therefore to assess what the EU
programmes and projects had achieved in terms not only of results
but also of sustainability. We also examined whether EU pre-accession
assistance had been effective in advancing the reforms that were needed
most for EU accession. We looked at priority sectors such as the rule of
law, governance and human resources. The main reason for this was that
these sectors form part of the EU’s fundamental values and were most
likely to be affected by the post-coup measures. Furthermore, the current
political and humanitarian context has placed the EU in a rather awkward
position vis-à-vis Turkey; on the one hand, the EU has committed itself to
accompanying Turkey’s accession process, which entails pushing reforms
in politically sensitive areas. On the other hand, it needs a cooperative
and willing partner to reduce illegal crossings into the EU. The review of
independent assessments helped us to identify the reforms needed in
these priority sectors. We then looked at the reforms actually funded by
IPA in order to identify any gaps.
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Auditing Turkey: from EU pre-accession to migration anagement
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The ECA published special report 7/2018 in March 2018 and concluded
that IPA funds had barely addressed a number of fundamental needs,
such as the independence and impartiality of the judicial system, high-
level corruption, press freedom, and support for civil society. Furthermore,
in areas where there was political will and reforms had actually
progressed, the sustainability of the results achieved was at risk, e.g. due
to large-scale dismissals of public officials who had been trained with
EU funds. The fact is that capacity-building is an important component
of all EU pre-accession assistance, so high staff turnover in the public
administrations of candidate countries can seriously undermine the
sustainability of IPA.
The report received considerable public interest, with more than
1000 online news articles and social media posts referring to it. The
reporting ECA Member, Bettina Jacobsen, presented the report to the
European Parliament’s budgetary control committee in April 2018, and
the committee endorsed its recommendations. In September 2018,
the Council’s Working Party on Enlargement underlined in its draft
conclusions ‘the
relevance of the findings of this audit for the management of
IPA for the beneficiaries, the mid-term review of IPA II, the current discussions
on the proposal establishing IPA III as well as for the wider enlargement
process’
.
As things stand, uncertainties over Turkey’s accession process remain. The
Council and the European Parliament cut Turkey’s pre-accession funds for
2018 by EUR 105 million, with an additional EUR 70 million of previously
announced spending held in reserve.
Auditing Turkey as a partner for migration management
On the same day as the ECA published Special Report 7/2018 on EU pre-
accession assistance to Turkey, and four months after the EU cut IPA funds
for Turkey, the Commission announced the release of the second EUR 3
billion tranche of the Facility for Refugees in Turkey (FRiT). Some of this
amount comes from unspent IPA funds.
The Facility was set up in 2016 as an innovative mechanism with the aim
of coordinating and streamlining actions financed from the EU budget
and bilateral contributions from EU Member States. Finding the best time
to examine the FRiT was not easy. One reason to commence the audit as
soon as possible was the date of its second tranche, scheduled for 2019.
This meant that our report had to be published in 2018. The complicating
factor was that the actions funded under the non-humanitarian strand
of the Facility, such as hospitals and schools, require between three
to four years to be completed, meaning that projects would not have
advanced sufficiently in 2018. In the end, the ECA decided to launch the
task in October 2017 with a focus on the humanitarian strand of the FRiT,
which accounts for approximately 50% of the Facility’s budget and funds
emergency projects with a shorter lifespan.
A significant share of FRiT funding is channelled through IPA. This means
that, to some extent, migration-related funds in Turkey also follow the
same procedures and rules as EU pre-accession funding. However, as
a candidate country, Turkey is the final recipient of EU funds and has
a relatively clear framework of standards to comply with. These are
Methodology used to
assess effectiveness of IPA
implementation in Turkey
By Dennis Wernerus,
Head of Task for the IPA audit of Turkey
We considered that the IPA’s
implementation was effective when
it delivered the intended project
outputs without significant delays,
and produced sustainable results. In
order to assess this, we first selected
three sectors among the many sectors
prioritised by the EU:
Rule of law (fundamental
rights, justice, home affairs)
Governance (civil society,
public administration reform,
public finance management)
Human resources (education,
employment and social
policies)
Taken together and only for IPA I,
these three sectors amounted to€1.5
billion in terms of contracts. We
focused on the performance of the
IPA’s management by the Turkish
authorities, because they actually
manage around 85% of all IPA funds
in Turkey. We selected 15 projects
from the above three sectors, which
together amounted to € 112 million,
and assessed their performance. We
also reviewed the various audit and
monitoring reports produced by the
Commission, the EU delegation in
Turkey and the Turkish authorities.
Whenever feasible and possible, we
tried to take account of the views
of those who implemented and
benefited from the projects, i.e. the
Turkish authorities, international
organisations, civil society
organisations and other recipients of
EU funds.
Once we had identified the sectors
to be audited, we used data-
analysis techniques to search for
related projects in the Commission’s
databases. Projects were selected
on the basis of their relevance to
the
acquis,
the representativeness
of the sector, geographical spread
and, most importantly, the level of
implementation, the aim being to
ensure that results could actually be
audited. This also explains why there
is no IPA II project in our sample: such
projects had either not yet started, had
started but were not relevant to the
acquis
(e.g. projects in connection with
FRiT), or were still at a very early stage
when the audit work was carried out.
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Auditing Turkey: from EU pre-accession to migration anagement
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defined under each of the 35 chapters of the EU
acquis.
This applies less to
the migration file, where the Turkish authorities have a stronger say about
refugees’ needs, where the EU aid should be allocated, and who should deliver
it and how. We had to take this difference into account when developing our
audit criteria, e.g. for assessing the relevance of EU actions.
Beyond its considerable public and political significance, auditing the FRiT
provided a valuable learning experience. Firstly, as regards the setting-up,
coordination and value-for-money of a new emergency response mechanism,
which may be replicated in the future to cope with similar crises; secondly,
as an in-depth examination of a major programme under the humanitarian
strand of FRiT, the Emergency Social Safety Net (ESN). With a budget of
€ 1 billion, the ESN was implemented by the World Food Programme in
collaboration with the Turkish authorities, and is the EU’s largest-ever
humanitarian programme, providing cash assistance to 1.3 million refugees
living outside the camps. The Commission estimates that more than 30% of
its emergency relief is cash-based assistance, the ESN being the EU’s flagship
programme. Our audit covered the ESN’s internal controls, its cost structure,
the reliability of basic beneficiary data, and the results achieved. Our work
on Turkey thus also provided valuable benchmarks for assessing other cash-
based assistance programmes. The special report related to the audit is due to
be published towards the end of 2018.
Changing dynamics of the EU accession process
In sum, Turkey is the largest recipient of EU pre-accession funding. In addition
to longstanding security and commercial ties with the EU, Turkey has
emerged as a key partner to help the EU stop illegal migration. Indeed, the
EU money allocated to Turkey for migration management has, in the space
of only four years, surpassed total pre-accession funding for the last 14 years
combined. It is therefore no surprise that this has substantially influenced EU-
Turkey relations, and also affects the dynamics of the EU accession process.
The question now is whether the need to work together on migration will
serve as an opportunity to re-activate and enhance the accession reform
agenda, or will actually slow things down as the focus shifts towards
migration. Through our audits, we intend to provide an objective analysis of
the progress achieved in both fields at this crucial time.
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A man, a dog and an EU-funded four-wheel
drive: auditing in the field
By Jussi Bright, Investment for Cohesion, Growth and Inclusion Directorate I
ECA auditors regularly go out into
the field to check the situation on
the spot, e.g. in candidate countries
or potential candidate countries.
Often enough, this leads not only
to relevant findings about the way
EU financial support is used, but
also to interesting experiences and
anecdotes. Jussi Bright shares one
of his field experiences when he was
head of task for an audit assessing
the performance of EU aid for justice
and home affairs projects in the
Western Balkans.
Source: ECA
Auditing the results of the integrated border management
programme
When I see this photo that was published in ECA special report 12/2009
on the effectiveness of justice and home affairs projects in the Western
Balkans, one particular story of an audit in the field comes to mind. Justice
and home affairs projects deal with integrated border management
(IBM), and judiciary and police matters. In this case, I was auditing an IBM
project on the Greek-facing border of the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia.
A modern IBM strategy is based on four key principles: communication,
intelligence, mobility and fire power. To help implement this strategy,
the European Commission provides aid for pre-accession countries in
the form of technical assistance and equipment. Our role was to examine
whether the programme’s intended results had been achieved and
sustained: in other words, whether illegal border crossings could be
detected more easily. In this specific case, I audited the ‘vehicles for border
police’ project, as exemplified by a four-wheel drive jeep to increase the
mobility of the border police.
Visuals bringing back memories
First of all, I should stress that it was quite a challenge to include the
above photo in the report. While there was general agreement that our
audit reports could benefit from more visuals, critics said: ‘Of course Mr
Bright wants this photo in the report: he’s in it!’ My response was that
although this is technically correct, it is mainly my back that is visible in
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A man, a dog and an EU-funded four-wheel drive: auditing in the field
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28
the picture and I doubt whether even my Mum could recognise me. I
recall adding: ‘You can call it vanity, but the idea of a photo is to show the
public that unlike many other audit offices, the ECA generally goes on the
spot to check project results, be they motorways in Poland, jobs created
by SMEs in Portugal, or a four-wheel drive vehicle in operation on the EU’s
external border’.
I also recall that this border section was my second choice for a visit;
I actually wanted to visit the border facing Kosovo.* ‘Sorry, no: too
dangerous,’ said Paul, the EU project manager in Skopje. ‘I hope you’re not
trying to keep me away from some interesting audit findings,’ I quipped.
Then Paul showed me a border police vehicle that had been ambushed
recently and suggested going to Gevgelija on the Greek border. I thought
this was an excellent idea…
A man, a dog and an empty field
It turned out that visiting Gevgelija was not a bad choice at all. There were
many illegal border crossings happening there. Almost exclusively, these
involved Macedonians crossing the border to work on Greek farms. While
we were standing on the border, the border police (the man in green)
suddenly got a call: somebody had been arrested. We all jumped into
our jeeps. With adrenalin coursing through my veins, I wondered what
to expect: something serious involving an organised crime syndicate,
perhaps? No: we found an old man and a young dog sitting in the middle
of an empty field. The man was sad, but the dog was clearly enjoying the
unexpected attention. Against all expectations, the man was Greek; the
dog, however, was Macedonian. That was the key to the mystery: the man
was a recreational hunter and needed a new hunting dog. A trained dog
is worth thousands of euros in Greece, but is much cheaper on the other
side of the border. To save some money and avoid veterinary checks, he
had crossed the border illegally, but was caught returning back home. So
no thrilling story, but something rather down to earth, albeit illegal.
From field work to case study
We let the police get on with the paperwork, as we had to rush back
to Skopje to meet the Minister of the Interior (an audit mission in the
field can also include such encounters). The news was faster than us,
however, and the Minister greeted me with open arms, referring to our
recent finding in the field and praising me for keeping a cool head in
such a situation. I thanked her for her warm words, but was thinking of
the statistical likelihood of what had just happened. All this had occurred
at the exact time the ECA auditors were there. Well, at least I had a nice
case study based on a true story for my next training course on the
auditor’s sceptical mind. If you want to know more about our findings on
the effectiveness of EU support for border management in the Western
Balkans, the full tale is available in special report 12/2009 .
* This designation is without prejudice on status and is in line with UNSCR 1244 and the
International Court of Justice opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence.
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SIGMA fostering strong public institutions
towards EU membership
By Bianca Brétéché, SIGMA Programme at the OECD
When you have a closer look at
capacity building in candidate
countries a name that quickly
pops up is SIGMA, a joint initiative
of the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development
(OECD) and the European Union,
principally financed by the EU.
What does SIGMA actually do,
including regarding audit, and
how does it relate to activities the
ECA undertakes with Supreme
Audit Institutions (SAIs) in
(potential) candidate countries.
Bianca Brétéché, working as
Senior Advisor public financial
management and external audit
in the SIGMA programme at the
OECD, replies to these questions
and why developing SAIs is so
important.
Source: OECD
Challenge of institutional transformation
SIGMA - these five little letters stand for ‘Support for Improvement in Governance and
Management’ and are the name of an amazingly successful, long-term joint initiative of the
OECD and the EU for more than 25 years now. Since I joined this programme ten years ago
I have felt privileged to have the chance to work in the international environment provided
by the OECD in one of the most beautiful cities in the world: Paris! On top of this, working in
the most interesting and extremely rewarding field of international co-operation for public
governance and institutional capacity building for EU integration.
After the fall of the Berlin wall, the breakdown of the USSR and the iron curtain, when the
door opened for integrating Central and Eastern European countries into the EU, most
international organisations were counting on their economists to help those countries
with the necessary economic reforms. But the OECD and the European Commission were
convinced that one of the biggest challenges for transformation of these countries would be
institutional. With this conviction, they established the SIGMA programme in 1992 to help
countries transform and reform their public administrations to prepare them not only to
become
members of the EU but to
be
strong and reliable members.
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30
SIGMA fostering strong public institutions towards EU membership
continued
The specific feature of the SIGMA programme is that we
work in horizontal areas of public administration: policy
development and co-ordination, public service and human
resource management, accountability of the administration,
service delivery and public financial management, including
public procurement and external audit, and the strategic
framework of public administration reform. Some years ago,
together with the European Commission, we developed the
‘The Principles of Public Administration
1
’ and a measurement
framework that allows the evaluation of progress in public
administration reform against these Principles.
Peer-to-peer basis
We work on a peer-to-peer basis, which means that all
SIGMA senior advisors have long-standing, practical public
administration reform experience in an EU member state.
Several of our colleagues nowadays come from countries
that joined the EU in 2004 or 2007 and bring their own,
personal experience with the EU integration process of their
home countries.
Personally, I’m from Germany, born, raised and educated in the Western
part. After my legal training I became a civil servant in one of the German
states, Brandenburg, only a few years after the German re-unification.
There I experienced first-hand the challenges of the transition of the public
administration from a socialist country to an open market state. The majority
of my colleagues in the Court of Accounts of Brandenburg had started their
career in the former German Democratic Republic. After the re-unification,
they suddenly had to understand the completely different state model of
Western Germany, familiarise themselves with a fully-fledged set of laws
and regulations and apply them correctly in their day-to-day work. I have to
admit that as a young lawyer, trained in Western Germany, at the time I often
didn’t understand well the queries of my colleagues, but looking back now I
realise that this experience has helped me a lot to understand the problems
of EU candidate countries and potential candidates.
SIGMA and external audit: spin-off not only for developing SAIs
So, what does SIGMA do and how does it help to develop strong and efficient
state audit institutions, fit to play their role as watchdogs of national and
EU money? For the audit area, we usually have 2-3 colleagues to cover 19
countries (since 2008 SIGMA also works in the EU Neighbourhood countries).
This is of course impossible without the help of a large network of external
experts, who include senior people from EU member state SAIs or the ECA,
whether active or retired. Together with us, these experts travel and work
with our partner colleagues in areas such as developing strategic plans,
reviewing legislative frameworks, advising on audit manuals and guidelines,
providing training for specific audit issues. Moreover, we sit down with
managers and presidents of SAIs to think about best ways to strengthen the
role of the SAI in their countries and also for the EU integration process.
Source: OECD
1
http://www.sigmaweb.org/publications/principles-public-administration.htm.
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31
SIGMA fostering strong public institutions towards EU membership
continued
SIGMA also continues to support the Network of SAIs of candidate
countries and potential candidates and the ECA, through organising
roundtables, workshops and training. This work sometimes includes
comparative studies such as the SIGMA paper on ‘Developing effective
working relationships between SAIs and Parliaments
2
’ that we drafted
with the help of Jan Pieter Lingen, a former ECA staff member, and which
was published in 2017.
Interestingly this study, which was commissioned by the SAI Network
for their purposes, also received very positive feedback from member
state SAIs and the wider international community. This shows that the
questions addressed in the document and the toolkit, based on practical
experiences, are also interesting and inspiring for developed and mature
SAIs. It is an experience that we find frequently: the EU integration
process brings up and spells out challenges that EU member states face
as well, and some of the solutions found nowadays in EU candidate
countries and potential candidates can also serve very well within the EU.
SIGMA is of course only one small player among other EU support, like
Twinning, Technical Assistance and TAIEX, the Technical Assistance and
Information Exchange instrument of the European Commission. But I
think the joint efforts pay off: our regular assessment of reform progress
3
that is published on our website shows that SAIs are clearly one of the
stronger, better-managed public institutions, and are more trusted by
citizens, in the current EU candidate countries and potential candidates.
This also gives them a unique opportunity to support the EU integration
process with their audit work, for example by realising performance
audits that provide governments and parliaments with insight about
important reform processes for EU integration.
Ongoing challenge: from design to implementation
Today more than ever, I believe in the importance of strong public
institutions and in our responsibility to help the countries that strive to
become members of the EU to strengthen their public administration,
including the SAIs. The legal frameworks for solid institutions are
mostly in place now. The current and future challenges are their full
implementation. Additionally, we need to continue to provide particular
support to the SAIs in finding appropriate ways to deal with their
sometimes very difficult political environment, as well as the frequently
misleading expectations of their parliaments and citizens.
2
https://doi.org/10.1787/d56ab899-en
3
http://www.sigmaweb.org/publications/monitoring-reports.htm
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EIB in the Western Balkans:
how the EU Bank helps
countries towards accession
and EU integration
By Matteo Rivellini, Lending Operations in Slovenia,
Croatia and Western Balkans, European Investment Bank
Railway in Montenegro.
Source: EIB
The European Investment Bank, or as they like to call themselves, sometimes also called the
‘’EU Bank,’ ’ is the world’s largest multilateral lender and borrower, including providing inter alia
funding for many projects within the EU and implementing one of the key initiatives of the
Juncker Commission, the European Fund for Strategic Investments. But what does the EIB do for
(potential) candidate countries? Matteo Rivellini, as Head of Division in the EIB responsible for the
Bank’s operations in Croatia, Slovenia and the Western Balkans, gives an overview on what the EIB
does, particularly in the Western Balkan countries and how it ties in to EU policy initiatives.
The Western Balkans – a key priority for the EIB group
The Western Balkans is a key priority for the EIB Group, consisting of the European
Investment Bank and the European Investment Fund. Since 2007, the EIB Group has
financed projects totalling over € 8 billion in the region. For comparison: In 2017,
the EIB Group provided more than € 78 billion for long-term investment in projects
across Europe and around the world. The EIB’s regional activity follows the EU’s
objective of helping the Western Balkans towards accession and rapid integration
into the EU.
Financing from transportation to environmental protection
Our work in the Western Balkans is broad, from building roads and railways, to
investing in energy and digitalisation projects. We are working actively to improve
the region’s physical, human, and economic connections both with the EU and
within the region. However, there is more to do. The quantity and quality of
infrastructure in the region is low, well below the level found in the EU. According
to the IMF, the average infrastructure development in the Western Balkans is about
50% lower than the EU average, ranging from approximately 30% in Serbia to
almost 70% lower in Albania.
This issue is observed across a number of sectors. In transport, Western Balkans
countries have on average 54 kilometres of roads per 100 square kilometres of land,
compared with 126 kilometres of roads per 100 square kilometres in the Central
and Southeast European countries in the EU, excluding Romania and Bulgaria. In
response, the EIB is financing roads in the region including those on the so-called
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EIB in the Western Balkans: how the EU Bank helps countries towards accession and
EU integration
continued
33
priority corridors in Serbia and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and
in Bosnia and Herzegovina. To develop a more sustainable and diverse regional
transport system, several new rail operations are also under consideration. This
includes supporting Montenegro’s national railway network upgrade along the Bar-
Podgorica-Vrbnica line forming part of the Orient/East Mediterranean Extended
TEN-T core corridor.
Concerning energy, power generation in the Western Balkans largely comes from
lignite coal power plants (over 55%) and hydropower (over 35%). While domestically
mined lignite provides the region with supply security, this form of coal emits
significant levels of greenhouse gas and other pollutants. Wind, solar and other
energy efficiency projects have a large untapped potential in the region. Given
the lignite-rich context and the green EIB energy lending policy, the Bank’s energy
sector lending represents a small share of our work in the Western Balkans (about 4%
compared to 15% within the EU). We are exploring opportunities in energy efficiency
and renewable energy to make the region greener and more sustainable. For
example, the EIB is participating in the European Commission-led pilot programme
to boost energy efficiency in Serbia and is appraising potential investments in wind
farms.
The EIB is also active in other vital sectors that promote key regional objectives
such as manufacturing, research and development, and environmental protection.
In Serbia, we have provided € 500 million to Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) to
refurbish, modernise and expand the company’s automotive plant in Kragujevac.
This has increased production capacity from 30,000 vehicles to over 180,000
vehicles. Also in Serbia, we have provided € 200 million of financing to support
public sector research and development to promote innovation and science literacy
in the country. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, following the 2010 Sava river basin floods,
the EIB have financed flood defence facilities along the Sava river and its tributaries
to protect people, houses and industries in the area from future flood damage.
All of this work is assisted by the EIB’s central role in the EU’s Western Balkans
Investment Framework (WBIF). This unique partnership between the European
Commission, International Financial Institutions (IFIs), EU Member States and our
Western Balkans partners, is highly effective in supporting the region through
blending EU grants and IFI financing.
Stimulating SME development
The EIB does not only support infrastructure projects. Ensuring investment of small
and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) is also a core part of our business. Western
Balkans countries have fewer SMEs than the EU, according to population size (30
SMEs per 1,000 people compared with 47 SMEs per 1,000). Yet, SMEs contribute
towards over 65% of value added in the region. These small businesses generally
need more support for longer-term financing where impediments are often related
to high collateral requirements.
The EIB helps by lending to local banks and other intermediaries, which
subsequently ‘on-lend’ to SMEs and midcaps. Since 2007, the EIB has provided over €
3.1 billion of financing to intermediaries in the region. In 2017 alone, the EIB Group
financed over 800 SMEs generating more than 45,000 jobs in the Western Balkans.
This work is reinforced by our participation in lending facilities such as the Western
Balkans Enterprise Development and Innovation Facility (WB EDIF). WB EDIF provides
financial instruments for SMEs such as loan guarantees. To date,
€ 275m has been invested into the programme and 4,600 SMEs are to be supported
under WB EDIF.
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EIB in the Western Balkans: how the EU Bank helps countries towards accession and
EU integration
continued
34
Accountability and cooperation with other European institutions
We strive to demonstrate to EU citizens that we have their best interests at heart and
are accountable to them. We are committed to good administration and delivering
positive results as laid out in our corporate responsibility. Our robust accountability
framework ensures the right to be heard and the right to complain by any EIB
stakeholder  who believes we have failed to honour these commitments, for example
through the Bank’s Complaint Mechanism.
In line with good governance, we strive towards constant improvement in all aspects
of performance, and our Operations Evaluation (EV) forms an important part of this.
EV carries out independent ex post evaluations of EIB and EIF activities, looking at
relevance, effectiveness, efficiency and sustainability, with two aims:
-
Accountability: to assess whether our activities have been in line with our
policy mandates and the strategies that have derived from them, and if these
activities have delivered as expected.
Lessons learned: identifying possible areas of improvement that can be
applied to Group activities to increase performance in the future.
-
Furthermore, we maintain close working ties with the other members of the family
of EU institutions in pursuit of the Union's objectives. In particular, we have a strong
and fruitful cooperation with our colleagues from the European Court of Auditors: in
accordance with Article 287(3) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU), the
European Court of Auditors can audit loan operations under the mandate conferred
by the EU on the Bank, as well as the operations managed by the Bank that are
guaranteed by the general EU budget.
Financing for the future: going beyond the traditional projects
As we look ahead, the EIB Group will continue to support important projects in the
region. In 2016, the EIB launched the Economic Resilience Initiative (ERI), following
a request from the European Council as part of a joint response to the refugee
and migration crisis. ERI is addressing social and economic infrastructure gaps and
stimulating private sector-led growth by increasing the EIB’s financing in the Southern
Neighbourhood and Western Balkans from the € 7.5 billion already envisaged to € 13.5
billion over a five-year period.
ERI, alongside our other activities, represent the EIB’s continuous commitment
towards enhancing the prosperity of the Western Balkans. Our support will contribute
to the on-going economic and social stabilisation of the region. Moreover, in the
context of this year’s Bulgarian and Austrian Presidency’s of the Council of the EU,
which have placed the region’s enlargement as a priority, our support is fully aligned
with helping our Western Balkans partners on their paths towards EU accession.
Source: EIB
Zvezada Technology Parc Serbia
Architect: Predrag Jakovljevic
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35
The EBRD and the
road to EU accession
Corridor Vc Zenica bypass in Bosnia Herzegovina.
Source: EBRD
Western Balkans: EU membership challenges creating opportunities
By Zsuzsanna Hargitai, Western
Balkans Directorate of the EBRD
While the approximation process between Turkey and the EU is currently
seeing little progress, preparations for membership of the European
Union are gaining momentum in the Western Balkans. The six countries
of the region – Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, FYR Macedonia, Kosovo,
Montenegro, Serbia – are making serious efforts to fulfil the Copenhagen
criteria. Thanks to its mandate, which combines investment with policy
engagement, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(EBRD) is ideally placed to play an important role in this process.
The Copenhagen criteria, defined in 1993, are the rules that define whether a country
is eligible to join the European Union. They start with political criteria for guarantees
for democracy, human rights and the rule of law. Another key criteria is to have a
functioning market economy. The final key criteria is to have the administrative and
institutional capacity to take on the obligations of EU membership.
Bringing (potential)
candidate countries up to
gear to meet the criteria for
EU-accession is a challenge.
Almost all of these countries
have sought and continue
to seek external support.
Since 1990, the EBRD is an
important provider of such
support. Within the EBRD
Zsusanna Hargitai is, as
director, responsible for the
investments and assistance
provided to Western Balkan
countries. Her contribution
provides not only an
overview of what the
EBRD does in the Western
Balkan countries aiming for
EU membership, but also
insights in how this can
lead to concrete changes
on the ground or support to
specific organisations.
The approximation process is taking place on two levels: investment and
reforms aim to strengthen the economic performance of and governance
in the Western Balkans countries. The challenges are serious. For example,
the competitiveness of many firms remains below the levels seen in
previous accession countries. Productivity is often low and access to
finance is frequently difficult, especially for small private enterprises,
the most vibrant economic agents. After years of underinvestment, the
region’s infrastructure needs a massive overhaul. But this illustrates that
in every challenge there is also an opportunity: new connections can now
be built that will integrate the Western Balkans ever more effectively into
global trade flows.
Investment
The EBRD is a leading investor in all EU pre-accession countries, with
a strong local presence and a track record of operating efficiently and
effectively. We invest in all sectors of the real economy, and also in reliable
municipal services and transport which contribute to improving the lives
of millions of people. In the Western Balkans alone, our total cumulative
investments to date amount to €10.7 billion in more than 600 projects,
the majority of these in the private sector.
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The EBRD and the road to EU accession
continued
36
Our work benefits from a longstanding cooperation and strategic
partnership with the European Union, one of the EBRD’s founding
shareholders and its largest bilateral donor. In many EBRD investments in
the Western Balkans and Turkey we blend our financing with EU grants.
During the period 2014-2017, the EBRD signed a total of €284.6 million in
IPA grants, leveraging such grants to achieve over €3 billion of investment.
Through the EBRD’s participation in the Western Balkans Investment
Framework (WBIF), which pools resources from the EU, 20 bilateral donors,
recipient countries and financial institutions, we focus on transport
and infrastructure projects, greener economies and on advancing the
competitiveness of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Good
transport infrastructure is vital for well-integrated economies to boost
their regional and international trade.
The Western Balkans economies remain far behind EU countries in energy
efficiency: when measured per unit of GDP, the six countries consume on
average 37% more than the EU average. The EBRD provides funding and
policy engagement to address this challenge.
EBRD environmental projects, again combining investment with policy
measures, help improve standards in the countries of Western Balkans
and progress them towards EU acquis in the areas of wastewater and
solid waste management. Now all capitals in the region have joined the
EBRD’s Green Cities programme, leading to strategic plans and prioritised
investment to clean up cities and improve the everyday life of their
residents.
SMEs are crucial for the economic success and prosperity of the EU
accession countries. However, access to finance remains a major
obstacle for their growth and competitiveness, together with a lack
of adequate business skills and standards. The EBRD, with EU funding,
tackles these issues by providing finance and advice. The EU-EBRD SME
competitiveness programme is being rolled out across the region.
The EBRD is also seeking to address specific, underserved SME market
segments. The Bank’s specially designed ‘Women in Business’ programmes
combine loans with the provision of know-how tailored to promote
women’s entrepreneurship by helping women-led small and medium-
sized enterprises.
Policy engagement
The challenges that EU accession countries face are not only economic.
Weak institutions, insufficient transparency and a difficult business
environment are widely recognised to be key factors that are holding
back the region’s economic development. The EBRD is addressing these
issues head-on.
We do this through technical assistance and business advice on adopting
EU standards and through policy reform dialogue to advance efficiency
and transparency in public institutions. With our Investment Climate
and Governance Initiative the EBRD promotes reform initiatives in areas
of economic governance that affect the private sector by improving the
investment climate.
Example in transportation
The EBRD is working with the
EU on the upgrade of the Tirana-
Durres rail line and a new link to
Tirana International Airport in
Albania, as well as Corridor Vc in
Bosnia and Herzegovina, a vital
artery that connects the Western
Balkans with western Europe.
Between 2018 and 2020, the EBRD
will invest up to €700 million in
Corridor Vc alone.
Examples in energy
The EBRD promotes energy
efficiency in industries and
residential buildings, through
EU-supported credit lines under
Green Economy Financing
Facilities, in cooperation with
local commercial banks. The most
recent example is in Serbia, where
in September 2018 we signed
with UniCredit Bank a Dinar 600
million loan for investments in
private homes to improve energy
performance and generate savings.
In Bosnia and Herzegovina, thanks
to an EBRD loan and WBIF grant,
the city of Zenica will refurbish its
hospital, which cares for 300,000
patients a year, by introducing
energy saving and anti-flooding
measures. The investments
will result in energy savings of
more than 60% and reduce CO
2
emissions by up to 80%, while
patients will receive better service.
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The EBRD and the road to EU accession
continued
37
In the Western Balkans we have over 30 such projects in a wide range
of areas: encouraging transparent public procurement, establishing
platforms for public-private sector dialogue, improving governance in
state-owned enterprises, streamlining business inspections, building
judicial capacity, introducing alternative dispute resolutions system
(including commercial mediation), and more.
Enhanced cooperation stimulated through harmonisation
While many investment in climate challenges in the Western Balkans
are national in scope, there is a strong rationale for a complementary
approach that promotes regional convergence as a way to address
shared obstacles. The harmonisation of laws and practices across
the Western Balkans countries will promote enhanced regional
cooperation and integration, as well as supporting the governments’ EU
approximation goals, including in the context of developing a Regional
Economic Area and single ‘investment space’ for the region.
A concrete example of how we deliver is the
Regional Investment
Platform
(www.investinsee.com),
a new electronic one-stop shop for
foreign investors interested in the Western Balkans. It was developed by
the regional chamber of commerce, the Chamber Investment Forum,
established in July 2017 and bringing together the national chambers
of the six Western Balkans countries. The goal is to facilitate market
access and raise the region’s attractiveness to foreign direct investment
which remains behind inflows which have been registered in regions
with similar. For the EBRD this is a signal to deepen our engagement
and work to attract more investors. This is also why we are pleased to
be holding our 2019 Annual Meeting and Business Forum next May in
Sarajevo, where we expect to welcome more than 2,000 business and
other guests to discuss investing in the Western Balkans.
Example in public
procurement
We worked with the Serbian
government to support the
reform of public procurement and
strengthen the institutional capacity
of Serbia’s Republic Commission for
the Protection of Rights in Public
Procurement Procedures. In Albania,
the EBRD is providing capacity-
building in the Prime Minister’s
Office, the Albanian Competition
Authority, and the Bank of Albania,
on corporate governance in the
banking sector. In addition, the
EBRD has supported anti-corruption
training for public officials, in
cooperation with the OSCE.
Tunnel construction for the Corridor Vc Zenica bypass in Bosnia Herzegovina
Source: EBRD
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38
‘Enlargement process
as occasion for the
EU to reinvent and
reform itself’
Interview with
David McAllister, Member of
the European Parliament
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the Presidency
Source: EP
MEP David McAllister chairing the AFET Committee during the vote on EU-US relations in the AFET Committee meeting of 28 June 2018
The ECA reports on EU Pre-accession Aid are of particular interest to EP’s Committee on Foreign
Affairs (AFET). What does AFET do with ECA reports on this topic and what are an MEP’s view on
the enlargement process? David McAllister, Chair of the AFET Committee, gives his perspectives on
the work of his committee, the enlargement process and the use that the EP can make of ECA audit
reports. And he also shares his views on the looming UK withdrawal from the EU
The global village and its European neighbourhood
Your political roots have been in local and regional government. Can you
elaborate on your specific interest in international relations, what is your drive
for that?
I grew up in West-Berlin as the son of a German mother and a father who
was a civil servant in the British Military. Thus, my life was affected by foreign
politics, especially by the conflict between East and West, at an early age. As
a young politician, foreign relations have regularly crossed my path. Later
on, as Prime Minister of Niedersachsen, European Affairs and international
politics had a major impact on my work.
In a broader context and from the EU’s point of view, foreign relations are
becoming more important by the day. The EU’s security environment is
more volatile, unpredictable, complex and ambiguous than at any time
since the end of the Cold War. Projections anticipate that the EU will account
for only 5% of the world population in the 2050 horizon, compared to
13% in 1960. No single EU Member State can effectively respond to global
challenges on its own. It is high time to implement our Common Foreign
and Security Policy (CFSP) tools, instruments and policies to enable the EU
to respond to external conflicts and crises, build partners’ capacities and
protect the European Union.
... the EU will account for only
5% of the world population
in the 2050 horizon,
compared to 13% in 1960.
No single EU Member State
can effectively respond to
global challenges on its own.
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Interview with David McAllister, Member of the European Parliament
continued
39
You are also active in the Delegation to the EU-Serbia Stabilisation and
Association Parliamentary Committee (SAPC). How does this help you in your
position towards the candidate countries of the Balkan countries as far as EU
accession is concerned?
The SAPC meets twice a year and I always find the exchange with our
Serbian counterparts particularly enriching. But the delegation's work goes
beyond these bi-annual meetings. The delegation is actively engaged in
the enlargement process and puts a special focus on helping Serbia on its
ambitious path towards the European Union.
ECA reports helping AFET Committee members making informed
choices
Earlier this year the ECA published its special report 7/2018 on pre-accession aid
to Turkey and in 2016 it published a meta audit report concerning the Western
Balkans - special report 21/2016. Were these reports useful for the activities and
deliberations for AFET, what did AFET do with them?
The ECA reports were very useful for our work indeed, as they provided
evidence as to what works and what doesn't in our cooperation with Turkey
and the Western Balkans, as well as concrete suggestions for improving it.
The reports featured prominently in the Strategic Dialogue between the
European Parliament and the Commission/EEAS on the programming of IPA II
funds for the second half of the current multi-annual financial framework that
took place in March this year. The findings have also been used in the context
of AFET's annual reports on the enlargement countries.
What would you consider to be useful topics to be audited by the ECA and useful
for AFET’s work?
The reports by the ECA are already very useful for our work in AFET.
Especially the audits that concern the enlargement countries. Our focus
in the Committee is on the Western Balkan countries and the ‘wider’
neighbourhood in geographic terms. As regards thematic priorities, AFET and
its sub-committees deal with a wide range of issues, such as the promotion
of democracy and human rights, security and defence and migration. Every
audit that touches upon these topics is of interest for our work.
Increasingly the ECA present its reports in meetings of specialised EP Committees,
like DEVE, ITRE or REGI, besides presenting them to CONT. Would you think this to
be useful also for AFET?
Presentations of specific reports in AFET could be very useful to increase
our Member's awareness of the ECA's findings and enable them to engage
directly with the ECA on the issues at hand.
In its special report 7/2018 on Turkey the ECA has raised some observations to the
lack of sustainable effects of EU aid on administrative capacity building in Turkey,
due to a lack of political will. What do you think of this main conclusion and
which actions do you think the EU can undertake to improve this, to leverage its
influence to improve the situation in Turkey?
The view that the lack of political will has had detrimental effects on the
effectiveness of EU assistance in critical areas such as administrative capacity
building, rule of law and fundamental rights is widely shared in the Foreign
The ECA reports were very
useful for our work indeed,
as they provided evidence
as to what works and what
doesn't in our cooperation
with Turkey and the
Western Balkans, as well as
concrete suggestions for
improving it.
Presentations of specific
reports in AFET could be
very useful to increase our
Member's awareness of the
ECA's findings and enable
them to engage directly
with the ECA on the issues
at hand.
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Interview with David McAllister, Member of the European Parliament
continued
40
Affairs Committee. I share the report's recommendation to make stronger
use of conditionality in the funding for Turkey. In addition, I think it is
important to continue with the increased focus on supporting Turkish civil
society.
As AFET Chair you also contribute to the Conference of Committee Chairs
providing suggestions to the ECA on its work programme. How can the
ECA help MEPs in the policy-decision making process regarding future
enlargements and EU external actions as such?
The European Court of Auditors reports are already very valuable for our
daily work. EU financial management and the promotion of accountability
and transparency are of utmost importance especially in the enlargement
policy. A country that is unable to use EU funds in accordance with the
relevant EU rules and regulations is not ready to join our Union.
Enlargement process as opportunity for EU reform
Where do you see the pre-accession process going for the near future, also
in view some countries objecting further enlargement, even though the
European Commission President Juncker has suggested that Serbia and
Montenegro will be ready to join in the next few years?
While some talk of 'enlargement fatigue', I see a renewed focus and
understanding of the strategic importance of the enlargement process
among European decision-makers. The upcoming years are decisive for the
future of the Western Balkans and that of the EU itself. The enlargement
process is an occasion for the EU to reinvent and reform itself. Enlargement
is a democratic process that has no fixed dates – it is based on efforts
and progress, and a once frontrunner can turn into a laggard or the
other way round. A historical reconciliatory breakthrough and progress
demonstrated by FYROM along with immense reform efforts by Albania
are paving the way to opening accession negotiations with them next
year. I do trust that Montenegro and Serbia will redouble their reform
efforts and the remaining countries will advance on the reconciliation and
reform path. As the renewed EU engagement brings tangible benefits to
the citizens of the future EU members, we must do more to communicate
the good work of the EU in the Western Balkans and to better explain the
benefits of years. Although we have seen some positive signals in the last
few weeks, the rhetoric needs to be underpinned by concrete measures in
order to allow us to get out of the current deadlock.
Being from German and Scottish origin you are, like many Europeans, a
European with more than one nationality, or at least influenced by different
environments. What are your views on the current Brexit process and what
does it mean for you?
Brexit is a historic mistake! It will have severe consequences for the British
people and for its economy. However, we have to respect this sovereign
decision. The task is now to organise the disentanglement of the UK from
the EU's institutions and policies, and to agree on a new partnership. The
United Kingdom has been an EU member for 45 years. We share common
values and have a number of common interests. As a member of NATO,
the G7 and the UN Security Council, the UK should remain an important
economic, political and strategic partner of the EU.
I share the report's
recommendation to make
stronger use of conditionality
in the funding for Turkey.
A country that is unable to
use EU funds in accordance
with the relevant EU rules
and regulations is not ready
to join our Union.
The enlargement process
is an occasion for the EU to
reinvent and reform itself.
Brexit is a historic mistake!
It will have severe
consequences for the
British people and for its
economy.
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41
Capacity building in EU candidate countries
in the area of financial control: some
personal experiences and thoughts
By Jan Pieter Lingen, expert on capacity building in EU candidate countries
Source: TCA
Capacity building for administrations and
good governance are one of the issues
looked at by ECA auditors when it comes
to EU Pre-accession Aid. For several years,
and following his retirement from the
ECA, Jan Pieter Lingen has contributed to
projects that aim to build up administrative
capacity, often in the audit and finance
sectors, through ‘SIGMA’ projects organised
by the OECD and similar activities. He looks
back, elaborating on what these capacity-
building projects aimed for and what they
did – or did not – achieve.
Jan
Pieter Lingen meets Recai Akyel, President of the Turkish Court
of Accounts in Ankara in 2013
Getting to work with Pre-accession Aid and candidate countries
My first encounter with pre-accession aid and capacity building in candidate
countries was when I joined the ECA in September 2000 as Head of ECA Member
Maarten Engwirda’s private office. At the time, Maarten Engwirda was responsible
for the audit of pre-accession aid – although not
all
pre-accession, aid since
pre-accession aid in the structural funds area, for example, fell under the audit
responsibility of the ECA Member responsible for auditing structural funds. I recall
that this situation regularly led to discussions on how to coordinate audit scopes
and activities between the different teams.
The then ECA President, Jan Karlsson, was an enthusiastic supporter of
establishing good relations with Supreme Audit Institutions (SAIs) in candidate
countries, and he visited all of them, often with Maarten Engwirda. I had an
opportunity to accompany them on most of these visits. It was a very interesting
experience to witness the general atmosphere of hope and progress, and the
willingness of candidate countries’ SAIs to invest in a better future, as well as
the ECA’s commitment to assist in these efforts, which included an internship
programme for staff from those SAIs.
The European Commission and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) had jointly developed an initiative known as
SIGMA
(Support for Improvement in Governance and Management). The SIGMA
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Capacity building in EU candidate countries in the area of financial control: some
personal experiences and thoughts
continued
42
programme, which is based at the OECD and financed by the Commission, aimed
to support the capacities of the governments of EU candidate countries. One of
its initiatives was to organise workshops for auditors from candidate countries’
SAIs, and I was one of the ECA staff that assisted with those workshops. Later, I
also became involved in peer reviews of SAIs of (potential) candidate countries,
which were also carried out by SIGMA at the request of the SAIs concerned.
This contributed much to my understanding of the problems facing the audit
institutions in modernising their approach, methodology, communication policy
and organisation, and of course in the audit environment where they had to
carry out their work.
Practice what you preach
Interestingly enough, the accession criteria formulated by the Commission
and agreed by the Council were based on the principles of a modern public
financial management and control system and audit approach that were
non-existent even in some of the EU 15 Member States at the time. This led to
thought-provoking discussions between representatives of Member States and
candidate countries, for instance in the Contact Committee for financial control
organisations in Member States and candidate countries: ’Why don’t you do
yourselves what you demand from us?’ Jan Karlsson was rather upset that in his
home country, Sweden, no independent SAI existed at the time, while he had to
emphasise the importance of constitutional independence for SAIs during his
visits to candidate countries. A case of practise what you preach!
The fact that the SAIs’ organisational set-ups were not always very efficient or
effective raised comparable questions about the ECA’s own set-up. For instance,
when I participated in a peer review of the Bulgarian SAI in 2006, I concluded
that their collegial organisational model was not well suited to the challenges
they faced, which made me doubt whether a similar organisational set-up was
appropriate for the ECA itself. I admired the courage of the candidate countries’
SAIs in volunteering for peer review. At the time, this was not yet accepted as
good practice by many EU SAIs; indeed, it took some time and a considerable
effort for the ECA to acknowledge the usefulness of the concept for itself.
EU Membership as catalyst for change
Overall, my impression was that the candidate countries’ SAIs, and also the
relevant departments of those countries’ ministries of finance, were committed
to establishing a well-functioning public financial management and control
system, and were working hard to get there. The prospect of EU membership
served as a catalyst to promote change, and I was happy to play a very modest
role in this process. I found it personally enriching to meet colleagues and to
exchange knowledge and experience. The network of liaison officers related to
the EU Contact Committee played a stimulating role and supported many of the
activities designed to assist the candidate countries’ SAIs: the atmosphere was
positive, with lots of work in prospect but a commitment to make things happen.
My hope was that this ethos would remain after EU accession, and that it would
inspire the remaining candidates and potential candidate countries.
My expectation of continued capacity building was one of the reasons why I
continued to work for SIGMA in the Western Balkans and Turkey after I retired
from the ECA in 2011. I became involved in various activities related to capacity
building in candidate countries. I carried out assessments of SAIs; assisted in a
project to establish internal audit in Turkey; was involved in a project in Serbia to
stimulate cooperation between internal and external audit; worked on projects
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Capacity building in EU candidate countries in the area of financial control: some
personal experiences and thoughts
continued
43
in Turkey and Serbia to improve effective relations between their SAIs and
parliaments; participated in a peer review of Montenegro’s SAI and another
of the SAIs in Bosnia and Herzegovina; assisted with the development of a
strategic development plan for Albania’s SAI; and advised on fine-tuning audit
law in Kosovo.* One of my last contributions was towards drafting a SIGMA
paper on the development of effective working relations between SAIs and
parliaments (OECD, SIGMA paper no 54, Paris, 2017).
Capacity building needs solid foundations…
Looking back, I confess that I may have been too optimistic about future
progress. Development is not, of course, an unimpeded march forwards; it is
a struggle. The model of a modern public financial management and control
system can only be successfully implemented in a well-founded and publicly
supported democratic state based on the rule of law. Unfortunately, this was
– and is - not always the case, either in the Western Balkans, or in Turkey. One
of the legacies of the wars in the former Yugoslavia is a political system based
on perceived victimisation, nationalism and ethnicity, against a backdrop of
corruption in the privatisation of former state companies. This means that
interests other than the general interest in establishing good governance
prevail. It is extremely difficult for SAIs to operate effectively in such an
environment. There was no war in Albania, but the other factors I mention are
equally valid. And the political developments in Turkey are well known: the
rule of law has in effect been abolished. The risks are that an SAI’s leadership
becomes politicised, its mandate restricted, its independence weakened, its
budget reduced, or its reports simply neglected. Several of these risks actually
materialised in many of the countries mentioned.
… and our support
Over the years, I have felt more and more disappointed that the path towards
development has been hindered by political interference and bureaucracy.
The pace of development has slowed considerably, and there have been many
setbacks. I feel sorry for the colleagues with whom I was in close contact. They
were very willing, and committed to the professional development of their
institution and to good governance in general. They have every reason to be
frustrated by the sometimes very slow pace of development. I am still shocked
by a meeting I had with a former ECA intern in Ankara, who was suspended
after the aborted coup in 2016. After a couple of months, he was cleared of
supporting the suspected perpetrators of the coup, but his career was over.
My sympathy is with the auditors and other finance professionals who are
still trying to make the best of the situation – and who struggle to make any
progress. They deserve our strongest support!
*This designation is without prejudice on status and is in line with UNSCR 1244 and the
International Court of Justice opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence.
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44
The Western Balkans parallel performance
audit project: boosting regional cooperation
between national audit offices
By Jussi Bright, Investment for Cohesion, Growth and
Inclusion Directorate
During the last two years the ECA, together with
the Swedish National Audit Office, successfully
facilitated a performance audit project on
public procurement in the Western Balkans. The
audit work was conducted by the six Supreme
Audit Institutions (SAIs) of Albania, Bosnia &
Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia, Kosovo
*
, Montenegro and Serbia. Jussi
Bright, one of the key facilitators in the project,
elaborates on this project - the largest of its kind
ever carried out in the region - and how it has
enhanced the performance audit capacities of the
six participating public audit bodies. Also included
are statements from participants.
Source: ECA
Putting substance to the INTOSAI motto
Did you ever wonder what the Latin text in the INTOSAI logo
stands for? ‘Experientia mutua omnibus prodest.’ means ‘Exchange
of experience benefits all.’ The Parallel Performance Audit (PPA) I
facilitated on public procurement audit in the Western Balkans aimed
at putting this catchphrase into practise regarding performance audit
in South-East Europe. This demonstrates that the INTOSAI motto are
not empty words.
Overall project purpose achieved: From suspicion to success
Of course, the project was challenging. In the initial stages of this
project, there was quite some suspicion and resistance: can this
actually work? It should not be forgotten that on the one hand, not
that long ago, most of these countries were at war. As pointed out
by Hazim Sabanovic, Western Balkans liaison officer of the Swedish
National Audit Office, in his INTOSAI capacity building blog ‘the
participating audit offices were expected to work together, to talk to
each other and share information on government issues, to exchange
their experience and help each other to improve the quality of their
audit work.’ This was not necessarily within the comfort zone of some
of the participating SAIs.
Source: INTOSAI
* This designation is without prejudice on status and is in line with UNSCR 1244
and the International Court of Justice opinion on the Kosovo declaration of
independence.
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The Western Balkans parallel performance audit project: boosting regional cooperation
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continued
45
On the other hand, the region has a common history and culture
with same kind of social and government challenges as numerous
Commission’s reports on enlargement have indicated.
The key outputs envisaged for the project were:
1.
carrying out parallel performance audits on public
procurement in all participating countries;
2.
publishing performance audit reports by all participating SAIs
and a synthesis report;
3.
exchanging experiences between the participants by among
other things carrying out peer to peer activities.
At the beginning, all six SAIs had to agree on the same audit topic,
which was public procurement. However, within this common audit
domain, each audit office could pick a specific topic depending on
national priority. For example, in Bosnia this was timeliness of the
procurement process in general but partly sparked by an incident
where the citizens did not receive their passports and could not travel
abroad due to failed tender procedures.
The six procurement reports produced were the following:
Country
Albania
Bosnia and Herzegovina
The former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia
Kosovo
Montenegro
Serbia
Name of the report
Overuse of negotiated public
procurement procedures without prior
publication of a contract notice
Timeliness of the public procurement
procedures in institutions of Bosnia
and Herzegovina
Lack of staff and established procedures
make public procurement less
effective at local level
Delays and cost overruns in
construction contracts
Planning the public procurement of
medical equipment
Efficiency and economy of the
negotiated procedure without invitation
to bid
Part of the statement made by Hazim
Sabanovic on the INTOSAI capcity
building bloc (see for complete
statement:
http://www.intosaicbc.org/
development-outside-the-comfort-
zone/
(…) We chose the hard way. After
exactly two years of work, in February
2018, we have published the Synthesis
Report on Public Procurement in
Western Balkans, with joint audit
findings and conclusions from six
participating SAIs. This is the biggest
such publication ever done in the
region. The media attention we
received was beyond ordinary. It started
with a ten minutes live interview in
prime time on the largest regional TV
network, which was then re-played by
a number of local stations, followed by
a number of newspapers articles and
radio broadcasts. Audit results were
presented at a regional prosecutors’
conference on public procurements.
Further results are yet to come. Each
of the six SAIs – even with different
audit scopes, all came to, more or
less, the same audit conclusions. This
makes the arguments presented in the
audit reports much stronger and more
difficult to ignore by the authorities.
The project was a success, the journey
was a very bumpy one, and there was
not a minute of comfort along the way.
Everyone had to compromise. Auditors
had to adjust and change everything
they usually do – from their work plans,
through their methodology, to the
structure and contents of their audit
reports. (…) What was driving us all?
Enthusiasm and energy within the
friendly Western Balkans audit group
that was, and still is, able to see beyond
the horizon of daily routine.
Project design and delivery: we are one but not the same
There are substantial challenges when managing parallel audit
projects. Unlike with joint audits, which have joint audit teams, identical
objectives, scope, methodology, and joint audit reports, parallel audits
are different. The teams and the reports are national. According to
ISSAI 5800 (‘Guide on cooperative audits’) the objectives, scope and
methodology are not the same but similar. The table below gives an
idea of the advantages and limitations of the parallel audit method.
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The Western Balkans parallel performance audit project: boosting regional cooperation
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46
Advantages
Effective and efficient from donor
perspective: many countries at
the same time. New platform to
cooperate.
Regular workshops
create
networks
Workshop design ”hands-on”
Peer pressure, healthy competition
among participants
Adaption to local context
Flexible approach to different
levels
Make use of many auditor’s
experiences and perpectives
Challenges and limitations
Cooperation does not go as deep
into issues as bilateral projects
Vulnerable to staff rotation
A lot of planning and
communication
Constant progress monitoring
Institutitutional and political
obstables by SAI
Ensuring appropriate training to
all
Strong long term commitment
and resource investment from
SAIs
Feedback from Goran Mandić, Senior
Advisor, Performance Audit Sector, State
Audit Institution of the Republic of Serbia
All this should be taken into account when trying to progress a
number of different audits simultaneously.
For example, a lot of time was spend on audit plans discussing ‘what
a good plan looks like.’. Even to the extent that another line from a
popular Irish band came to my mind: ‘I still have not found what I am
looking for.’. Nevertheless, focusing the audit early enough paid off
later on at the conducting and reporting phase.
The other challenge was to manage some 25 performance auditors
coming from the six audit offices. They all had different backgrounds
in performance auditing, different skill sets and a different level
of English. The two working languages of the projects were Yugo-
Esperanto and broken English. The quality of the individual national
reports and the joint summary report, show the remarkable will power
of the participants to learn and share experiences among each.
According to Simon Sinek (author of the book ‘Start with Why’) there
are only two ways to influence human behaviour: you can manipulate
it or you can inspire it. I am tempted to say that the PPA project used
both, also manipulation but manipulation only in a non-pejorative
sense. For example, facilitators used peer-to-peer reviews to create
a healthy pressure among the participants. Nobody wanted to look
bad in these international gatherings, although it has to be said
participation was always on voluntary basis. Much of the inspiration
of participants both during and after the project comes from the
networks you create during the workshops and is documented in
some of the participant’s feedback.
The Parallel Performance Audit
project is an incredibly professional
experience. Besides the fact that
I had the opportunity to listen to
lectures and work with experienced
auditors of the ECA and the Swedish
NAO, I exchanged experiences
with colleagues auditors from the
SAIs of the countries participating
in the project. The epilogue is that
we gained new knowledge about
performance audits, new skills in
communication, and a plurality of
stored contacts.
I am proud that I was part of the
team of the State Audit Institution
of the Republic of Serbia in this
project, and I sincerely hope that
more of my colleagues participating
in a new project like this will feel
this experience. Until then I will try
to unselfishly share my experiences
from this project. I take this
opportunity to once again thank the
organizers and all the participants in
the project.
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The Western Balkans parallel performance audit project: boosting regional
cooperation between national audit offices
continued
47
Feedback from
Milan Milović,
Auditor, Audit Office
of the Institutions
of Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Feedback from
Katica Nikolovska,
Principle Auditor
and PPA II team
leader, State Audit
Office of the former
Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia
The Parallel Performance Audit project
was something more than I expected.
Participation in such a project opened my
eyes. Besides gaining knowledge, getting
more experience in communicating and
learning to cope with stressful situations
that are characteristic for performance
audit, the main benefit for myself was
getting in touch with other auditors from
other SAI's and to stay connected. Even now,
I can send just a message to say hello or
congratulate someone because of a birthday
but also to ask for some advice and help
regarding current performance audits
This project was an incredible way for
learning from experienced auditors as well
as from sharing practices among the region’s
audit offices. There is only one ISSAI 300
(Fundamental Principles of Performance
Auditing) but I learnt that there are different
practices implementing it. As the common
synthesis report shows, we finished this
project as one. Facilitators shared their
knowledge unselfishly and guide us to
fulfill our audit goals. I liked the most the
constructive criticism at the peer-to-peer
review sessions regarding the different
stages of the audit process. What can I do
better? Is my audit plans and draft report
understandable for others? Sometimes the
workshop agenda was very intensive. Still, if
there is another chance for such a journey, of
course I would like to participate.
Sustainability is the most valuable outcome
At the beginning of the project, the key risk we identified was that knowledge gained by the participants
might not be institutionalised. Therefore, before starting this engagement, the ECA hosted a conference for the
Auditors Generals of the six participating SAIs to commit their top management to keep building a sustainable
performance audit function in their institutions. This commitment stayed valid to the end. The final common
workshop in in Belgrade in the summer of 2017 included two Auditors General, three Deputy Auditors General
and six performance audit managers. An individual workshop were organised during autumn 2017 on lessons
learnt and the way forward.
It cannot be emphasized enough that the buy-in of senior management was the key enabler to achieve good
project results. And the project results were even better than expected: subsequently two participating SAIs
have collaborated on their own as a direct results of the PPA project. From my point of view as a performance
auditor at the ECA, facilitating parallel auditing is an effective method to develop capacity and enhance
regional cooperation within the SAIs of the EU candidate and potential candidate countries.The network among
participants is alive and the headcount of performance auditors is growing. For example, in Serbia performance
audit started only in late 2012 by the appointment of Supreme State Auditor. Already the end of 2013 they had
seven employees, at the end of the PPA in autumn 2017 there were 15 persons. And their employment plan is to
have 19 employees! The sustainability of performance auditing in the region looks promising.
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48
How EU Pre-accession
Aid helped our SAI to
shape its future
Interview with Bujar Leskaj, President of ALSAI,
Albania’s Supreme Audit Institution
By Derek Meijers, Directorate of the Presidency
Bujar Leskaj, President of ALSAI
Source: ALSAI
When Albania submitted its application for EU membership in 2009, its national supreme audit
institution (SAI) decided to modernise and to align its working methods and procedures with
internationally recognised standards. To this end it participated in a twinning project, for which it
received training, guidance and advice from the SAIs of Poland and Croatia. Bujar Leskaj, President of
Albania’s Supreme Audit Institution (ALSAI), looks back at this experience and shares with us how his
organisation benefitted from it.
Has ALSAI received any EU pre-accession aid?
From the beginning of my mandate in 2012, it was clear that, for our SAI
to comply with the Copenhagen criteria (EU accession criteria) in the
field of external public audit, we had to modernise our organisation to
bring our audits in line with the INTOSAI standards.
To reach this goal, we asked the EU Delegation in Albania to support
us, and also re-activated our cooperation with SIGMA (Support for
Improvement in Governance and Management, a joint initiative of the
OECD and the European Union which helps third countries to strengthen
their public governance systems and public administration capacities).
SIGMA then started a training programme for our auditors in mid-2012
and established very good relations with the Commission’s Directorate-
General for Budget, which provided advice on the draft SAI law and later
also on the Instrument for Pre-accession programme (IPA).
In 2015, our efforts resulted in the grant of a twinning project worth
€ 2.1 million under the IPA for 2013. Which gave us another opportunity
to cooperate with the Supreme Audit Office of Poland (NIK) and the
Croatian State Audit Office (see box below). Two SAIs with which we
had already established very good working relations, since a group of
Albanian auditors had participated in a NIK training course on financial
audit and compliance audit procedures and risk assessment in July 2012.
it was clear that, for our SAI to
comply with the Copenhagen
criteria (EU accession criteria)
in the field of external public
audit, we had to modernise
our organisation ...
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Interview with Bujar Leskaj, President of ALSAI, Albania’s Supreme Audit Institution
continued
49
In addition to this, for many years already the ECA has been supporting
ALSAI auditors by providing internship opportunities. These projects
and exchanges give our auditors a unique opportunity to learn about
new audit approaches and gain valuable experience in other public
audit institutions, which is a substantial help for the SAI.
What were the main pillars of the twinning project?
The twinning experts analysed ALSAI's legal framework from the angle
of compliance with INTOSAI standards and adoptable models from
EU Member State SAIs, and provided us with practical guidelines for
implementing the new ALSAI law in specific areas and an action plan
for drafting subsidiary laws.
Our project partners also analysed ALSAI’s internal regulatory
framework and suggested reviewing and amending it in accordance
with the new ALSAI law, which provides new approaches for
compliance, financial and performance audits. They assessed the
regulatory acts and concrete practice in the area of ALSAI’s relations
with Parliament, and drafted a guideline on institutionalising those
relations and a plan for implementing the guideline. Finally, they
analysed the legal framework governing our practice when following
up the implementation of our recommendations.
Did you also develop pilot audits during the twinning project?
Yes, we tested the performance and financial audit manuals in a pilot
of four performance audits, three financial audits and one IT audit.
These audits were performed under the supervision of Polish and
Croatian experts, who lent their support during the planning, evidence
gathering and reporting stages, after which they reviewed the progress
made with our audit teams.
These projects and exchanges
give our auditors a unique
opportunity to learn about
new audit approaches ...
Twinning project between ALSAI and the Supreme Audit Office of Poland (NIK) and
the Croatian State Audit Office
Main pillars:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
analysis of gaps in the new SAI law, identification of possible barriers to implementing the law;
development of proposals for the institutionalisation of ALSAI’s relations with Parliament;
review, update and development of performance, financial and IT audit manuals;
development of an audit methodology and approach for audits of financial statements;
development of an overall strategy for audit planning.
Main outcomes:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
improved audit methodology in the fight against corruption and fraud;
adoption of a sustainability plan for the period after the twinning project;
implementation of an audit management and documentation system;
identification of the desired skills and necessary components for the auditor certification procedure;
extensive training of ALSAI auditors and implementation of professional development and professional
training procedures.
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Interview with Bujar Leskaj, President of ALSAI, Albania’s Supreme Audit Institution
continued
50
During these pilots, our auditors gained substantial valuable
experience in the field of performance, financial and compliance
audits, the fight against corruption and fraud, quality control and
assurance procedures, policies for communicating the results of audit
to the public and enhancing transparency, and human resources
policies aimed at increasing the professional capacities of auditors.
What are the most important lessons ALSAI learned during the
project?
Thanks to the experience gathered during the project, especially
with regard to the development of ALSAI’s methodology for
drafting strategic and annual plans, we prepared and launched the
ALSAI Development Strategy 2018-2022, which strongly expresses
our ambition and determination and projects ALSAI as a model
organisation to serve citizens for years to come .
So the twinning project was a valuable and successful experience
for ALSAI?
I think it was very successful indeed! The EU’s pre-accession support via
the twinning project helped us achieve the six main objectives of our
Development Strategy 2013-2017 – and four in particular: to amend
ALSAI’s legal and regulatory basis in accordance with international
standards and European good practices; to increase audit capacity-
building and audit quality; to increase the quality and number of
performance audits; and to re-engineer the use of IT in audits and
develop IT audits. So I think we can safely say that the substantial
support the EU has provided thus far on different levels has helped us
a great deal in modernising our capacities, consolidating our present
and shaping our future.
... the substantial support the
EU has provided thus far on
different levels has helped us a
great deal in modernising our
capacities, ...
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51
Audit authority on IPA funds: helping the
country to move towards accessions
From left to right: Dennis Wernerus, ECA, Adem Curi, General IPA Auditor, Hannu
Takkula, ECA Member, Liman Muhadziri, Deputy general IPA Auditor, Turo Hentilä,
ECA, Ivan Ignjatov, Assistant IPA Auditor, Jussi Bright and Helka Nykänen, ECA
Interview with Adem Curi,
Director of the Audit Authority
for the audit of IPA in the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
By Gaston Moonen,
Directorate of the Presidency
To ensure that EU Pre-Accession Aid is well spent, both
regarding compliance and results, the Commission has
required candidate countries to set up audit authorities
at national level for the audit of the Instrument for Pre-
Accession Aid (IPA). Adem Curi is the General IPA Auditor and
happy to explain what his organisation – the Audit Authority
for IPA of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia - does.
Acting as auditor for both Commission and national government
There are several players when it comes to the management of EU
Pre-accession Aid: at EU level, at national level of the recipient country
and also at regional and/or project level. The same goes for the audit
pyramid created to ensure accountability on what is done with the
EU funds provided. At national level an important player for both the
European Commission and for the national Government, is the Audit
Authority for IPA. Adem Curi: ‘We report to both the Commission and to
the Government, including to the different Directorates General of the
Commission for the particular components we have.’ Together with his
colleagues Liman Muhadjiri, Deputy General IPA Auditor, and Ivan Ignjatov,
Assistant General IPA Auditor, he visited the ECA in April 2018 to exchange
information and learn more about ECA audit methodology and approach
when it comes to auditing the Instrument for Pre-accession Aid (IPA); and
in search for closer cooperation.
Together with his two colleagues, Adem Curi explains how and why the IPA
Audit Authority was set up in his country. ‘We were established in July 2007
within the general framework of the national Supreme Audit Institution
(SAI), the State Audit Office (SAO). We were part of that office until 2011
and with the new requirements in the IPA legislation we had to operate as
a separate legal entity. As a result, we are now established as independent
audit body with a separate law reporting to the European Commission and
the government and thus separated from the State Audit Office, which is
working under Parliament.’ When asked how this affects his organisation’s
independence he explains: ‘We are auditing the IPA structure in our
... we are [...] reporting to the
European Commission and
the government and thus
separated from the State
Audit Office, ...
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Interview with Adem Curi, Director of the Audit Authority for the audit of IPA in the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
continued
52
country. We submit draft reports to the Government, the ministers are
aware of our findings. We have contradictory procedures, meaning that
Government can comment on our findings and then we have our final
report, which is not public. However, the Government does not approve
our Annual Report; we are independent in our audit work.’
His colleague Liman Muhadziri sets out how their organisation works:
‘We prepare an Annual Audit Work Plan, now regarding IPA II, we have
a Multi-Annual Audit Strategy and in this we cover all the parameters
of what we are going to audit. Based on the risk assessment we do, we
arrive at possible audit topics.’ He indicates that the results of their audits
are presented in one Annual Report. ‘We have different types of audits,
focusing on system audits, audit of operations and looking into the
efficiency and effectiveness of management control systems. ‘
When talking about the amounts his organisation has to audit, Adem
Curi gives an amount of € 622 million through the IPA I (2007-2013) and
€ 664 million through the IPA II (2014-2020). ‘The whole programme
of IPA for our country amounts to that. We are auditing this on an
annual basis according to internationally accepted auditing standards
(INTOSAI) with focus on risk assessment and sampling procedures. In
fact IPA II goes until 2020, like the Multiannual Financial Framework
does.’ He explains that in the audits his organisation also looks at the
sustainability of projects. ‘This is an important element in ensuring
effectiveness.’
Retaining good staff for IPA implementation
Discussing recent reports Adem Curi explains: ‘Recently we audited the
staff policy in the IPA structure of the Republic. An important finding
relates to the lack of qualified staff in the IPA structure. Staff needs to be
motivated to remain and work with IPA, but after couple of years they
leave and go to the private sector.’ He continues saying that they have
the same salary like other administrative civil servants while they need
to work in English and receiving the same salary. ‘We, as Audit Authority
report both in Macedonian and in English.’ He highlights the importance
of a good retention policy for staff working within the IPA structure to
continue working there. ‘This was one of the findings regarding the IPA
management structure and we made several policy recommendations
to better retain staff, since good staff is of key importance to ensure
effectiveness.’
Speaking about their own background, it turns out that all three know
the ECA rather well. Adem Curi further clarifies this. ‘We have all worked
in the ECA in its internship programme with candidate countries. ‘Ivan
was the first one in 2007, I was here in 2009. Each one of us stayed in
Luxembourg for 5 months, it was a good experience.’ Currently he heads
an organisation of in total 33 employees: ‘We are a small country, and
also a small organisation covering simultaneously several types of audit.’
That being said Adem Curi indicates that if the Commission would like
his organisation to audit a specific issue he most likely would do so. ‘The
Commission is a big stakeholder, in a way we are working for them. We
submit reports to them and if they have additional requirements for
audit coverage they can always ask us.’ He continues identifying where
most IPA funds toes to in his country and consequently, most of AA IPA’s
activities focus on. ‘We basically have five components for IPA funds:
transition and institutional building policy; cross border cooperation;
... the Government does not
approve our Annual Report;
we are independent in our
audit work.’
... good staff is of key
importance to ensure
effectiveness.
We have all worked in the ECA
in its internship programme...
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Interview with Adem Curi, Director of the Audit Authority for the audit of IPA in the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
continued
53
regional development; social policy and education; and rural and
agricultural development.’ He points out that each of the components has
several projects, some of which also directly benefit the EU. ‘For example,
a major project in regional development is the construction of the so-
called ‘motorway 10.’ This motorway is part of the pan-European corridors
and runs from Salzburg (Austria) to Thessaloniki (Greece).
Moving in the right direction
When it comes to what his organisation does regarding less tangible
issues, like the rule of law, Adem Curi refers to an audit they had done in
this area. ‘We will still have to see what the impact in the society will be.
But until now we can see that the institutions, which were rather closed
in the past, are more open now on what they do and adopting legislation
according to our key recommendations. Of course the implementation of
laws is always something to be seen, but I believe we are moving in the
right direction.’
When discussing the perspectives of accession for his country Adem Curi
is optimistic: ‘We recentsaw a more positive report from the European
Commission on this and we are waiting for the Council to give us dates
so our country can further progress.’ He also sees his optimism further
strengthened by words Commission President Juncker had said: ‘He
indicated that if there is no extension in the Western Balkans, there will
be another war in the Balkans. I believe that accession for Western Balkan
countries is an important step to avoid another civil war.’
In search for cooperation and training
When it comes to cooperation with other auditors Adem Curi and his
colleagues refer to the positive experience they had when working in their
SAO regarding the parallel performance audit on public procurement
issues. ‘We saw the positive impact of this on the auditors’ work. We want
to launch the idea of doing another parallel audit with audit authorities
from the whole region. I think it will have a good influence on our work,
improve it and we can develop our audit skills.’
He explains that the IPA Audit Authority has a mandate to audit IPA
funds, which the SAO does not have. ‘The more reason why we need to
strengthen our cooperation with other audit authorities set up by EU
Member States to audit the European Structural and Investment (ESI)
funds and the ECA. We can help the ECA when it comes to audit, we know
the EU regulations, the situation on the ground, and the ECA can build on
the work we have done. And we can learn from the ECA.’
In addition to discussing such cooperation, with the ECA using the IPA
audit authorities’ work as much as possible, Adem Curi finally highlights
another reason for his visit to the ECA. ‘We know the ECA and we would
like to have the opportunity to attend some trainings the ECA provides.
We know the ECA has a good programme for training auditors. And
we are very much interested in sending some of our audit staff to the
ECA for an internship, to learn from ECA auditors. Because they are the
most experienced in the whole of Europe when it comes to auditing IPA
funds.’are very much interested in sending some of our audit staff to the
ECA for an internship, to learn from ECA auditors. Because they are the
most experienced in the whole of Europe when it comes to auditing IPA
funds.’
... we can see that the
institutions, which were
rather closed in the past, are
more open now...
I believe that accession for
Western Balkan countries is
an important step to avoid
another civil war.
... the ECA can build on the
work we have done.
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54
ECA’s contribution to capacity building
in candidate country SAIs: providing
internships to share good practice
By Michael Pyper, Translation, Language Services and Publication Directorate
Since 1998, the ECA has each year welcomed auditors from the SAIs of EU candidate
countries for a five-month placement. The experience represents an opportunity for
them not only to advance their own careers, but also to experience a different audit
environment and disseminate what they have learned at their home institutions. Michael
Pyper spoke to Jovan Dabovic from Serbia, who has just finished his placement, and
Stanislava Gjoshevska from FYR Macedonia, who is about to embark on hers.
The programme: history and numbers
Once again this year, within the framework of pre-accession assistance, the ECA
welcomes a number of auditors from the Supreme Audit Institutions (SAIs) of
European countries that are currently candidates for EU membership: Albania,
the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Turkey. To
participate in the exchange, these auditors typically need a university degree plus
at least two years of professional experience in their home institutions, as well
as knowledge of English or French. The ECA puts candidates through a rigorous
selection procedure based on their biography, cover letter and subsequent
interview.
The exchange lasts for a period of five months. In order to ensure that their
home institutions benefit fully from their experience, auditors participating in
the exchange generally commit to spending at least a further three years there
following their return.
Through the placement programme, which started in 1998 within the framework
of pre-accession assistance, the ECA aims to provide auditors from the SAIs
of (potential) candidate countries with insight into the audit of EU funds. The
internship programme is a capacity-building tool that complements the ECA’s
support for the activities of the ‘Network of SAIs of Candidate and Potential
Candidate Countries’. Cooperation within the Network includes facilitating regular
exchanges of information, developing audit methodologies and professional
training, with the aim of achieving greater convergence in audit methodology and
audit practice.
In 1999, the ECA welcomed the first participant in the programme from a candidate
country SAI, namely Poland. Since then, 164 auditors, on average nine per year,
from 18 different countries have each spent five months in Luxembourg working
alongside ECA auditors to learn about the ECA’s methodology, further develop
their skills and gain valuable experience of working in an EU institution. During this
period, they may be placed in any of the ECA’s audit directorates. There they have
the opportunity to learn about and contribute to all aspects of an ECA audit, from
the planning phase and data analytics to on-the-spot visits and testing.
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ECA’s contribution to capacity building in candidate country SAIs: providing internships
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continued
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Over the years, the target population has changed considerably: up until the 2004 enlargement, the ECA
received 49 interns from the ten countries that joined the EU that year. The two subsequent enlargements
brought 29 interns from the three countries concerned. To date, 78 ‘ECA-trained’ auditors from the national
audit offices of 13 participating candidate countries have seen their countries become EU Member States.
The largest share of these interns (36 to date) has come from Turkey, one of the first countries to participate
in this programme, followed by the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Bulgaria, which have sent 17
and 13 auditors respectively.
interns
interns
interns
interns
interns
interns
interns
interns
interns
interns
interns
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intern
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Trainees per (former) (potential)
candidate country. Source ECA
interns
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intern
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Professional experience and good audit practice
The programme gives visiting auditors from candidate countries the opportunity
not only to further their own careers, but also to familiarise themselves with the
ECA’s audit approach and best practice, and to share their knowledge within their
home institutions upon their return. As Stanislava Gjoshevska, a Junior Auditor at
the SAI of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYR Macedonia), who will
start her placement at the Court in October, explains: ‘The ECA is a prominent audit
institution which provides valuable opportunities to exchange views and share
experience and good practice in audit work.’
Asked what had motivated her to apply for the programme, Stanislava replied that it
was an opportunity to obtain as much training and practical experience as possible
at a prominent audit institution, exchange professional experience and improve her
audit skills. ‘In particular,’ she said, ‘I aim to broaden my experience in performance
audit, accountancy and EU law.’ She believes the knowledge and experience she
Stanislava Gjoshevska
gains at the ECA will help her to contribute to further upgrading
her home SAI and promoting consistent audit quality in FYR Macedonia.
Stanislava has been working for the State Audit Office of FYR Macedonia since 2014.
In her career to date, she boasts a broad audit experience, having been involved in
financial and compliance audits of public authorities and political parties, as well
as performance audits covering a wide range of fields such as agriculture, energy
and natural resources. She therefore brings plenty of relevant experience to the
directorate to which the ECA has assigned her, which deals with the ‘Sustainable use
of natural resources’.
Comparing notes and transferring knowledge
Earlier this year, for the April 2018 edition of the Journal focusing on training at the
ECA, I interviewed Jovan Dabovic, a Younger Advisor in Audit at the Novi Sad office
of the Serbian State Audit Institution. I recently caught up with him again, shortly
after his return to Serbia. He worked for five months at the ECA, during which time
he became an integral part of the ECA community. He derived maximum benefit
from his experience working in the audit chamber dealing with ‘Financing and
Administering the Union’, notably on reconciling of the budgetary accounts with
the EU budget as part of the team responsible for drafting the ECA’s annual report
chapter on the EU’s budgetary and financial management. This is not to mention his
contribution to the ECA choir and football team.
So what next for Jovan? Thanks to the experience of several of his colleagues who
came before him, Jovan arrived for his placement at the ECA well- informed about
the programme and knowing what he wanted to achieve. And now, in the same
way, he intends to pass on his knowledge and experience to his colleagues. Because
Jovan Dabovic
his work at the ECA on the reconciliation of accounts was closely related to what
he had done back in Serbia, his ‘ECA time’ gave him the chance to compare and
contrast methods and tools. Jovan, who has a keen interest in financial and data
analytics, particularly welcomed the opportunity to further develop his skills in this
area. For instance, he was happy to get to grips with the Audit Command Line (ACL)
programme, given that the Serbian SAI uses its competitor, which is called ‘IDEA’.
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How will he transfer this knowledge? Jovan explained that, like the other Serbian
auditors who have returned from Luxembourg before him, he will provide the
president of the SAI of the Republic of Serbia with a written report on what he
did during the five-month period. This report covers points such as audit area and
tasks he was assigned to, what kind of audits he performed, whether he undertook
any missions, what training he received, and extra-curricular activities. Just as he
benefited from the informal advice of his colleagues before coming, Jovan will be
more than happy to offer the same help to his interested colleagues.
Making the most of the opportunity
Beyond any specific aspects of audit, however, Jovan has the following advice for
those making the journey after him: ‘Try to make the most of each opportunity
given to you. An internship at the ECA is a unique chance to improve your audit
skills, meet new people, practice languages (and not just English) and present
yourself in the best possible light.’
Stanislava, who will arrive on 1 October, is ready to follow Jovan’s recommendation.
She is very much looking forward to the challenge of submerging in the wealth of
cultures, traditions and diverse identities that Luxembourg has to offer. She adds:
‘I am eager to be part of an institution that offers the opportunity to work in a
diverse, multicultural environment, one that emphasises professional and personal
development and strives to improve the lives of millions of European citizens.’
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ECA internship for auditors of candidate
countries: a portal for professional
development and…
a return to the ECA
By Jolita Korzuniene, Investment for Cohesion, Growth and Inclusion Directorate, and
Tomas Mackevičius, Private Office of Rimantas Šadžius, ECA Member
Since almost two decades the ECA offers internships to audit staff of national audit institutions
of (potential) candidate countries. What were the early experiences and, perhaps even more
interesting, what has been the impact of such internship. To know more on both accounts we did
not have to go far: two current ECA staff members started 17 and 15 years ago their internship,
went back to their national audit institution in Lithuania, and returned to the ECA. Jolita Korzuniene
works now as an ECA principal auditor and Tomas Mackevičius as attaché in a private office. Below
their personal account on why they started at the ECA back then and came back for.
My ECA traineeship in 2001: a stepping stone on several accounts
By Tomas Mackevičius
New kids on the block
Following the accession process of the new candidate countries
into the EU, in the year 2000, the ECA started inviting auditors from
the Supreme Audit Institutions (SAIs) of these countries for a five-
month internship. At that time, I was a young yet senior auditor
at the National Audit Office of Lithuania and among the first ones
interviewed and chosen by the ECA’s selection panel for an internship
starting on1 March 2001.
I can clearly remember my first day in Luxembourg – a grey and
chilly morning of the first day of spring with snow melting under my
shoes, everything was strange and unknown, juxtaposed with a very
warm reception by ECA staff and colleagues in the section to which I
was allocated . The section was called
PECO,
the French abbreviation
for the unit in charge of auditing the use of pre-accession funds for
candidate countries and other EU external aid. Indeed, in my case
the unit was very relevant for on-the-job training and extremely
beneficial for my future career
I was in the good company of three other interns from SAIs of
candidate countries (Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania and Slovakia), with
whom I had the most remarkable time. I still remember that we were
very proud of an article with a photo that appeared on the front page
of the ‘Luxemburger Wort’ of Jan O. Karlsson, then President of the
ECA and us. With the four of us representing somehow the new wave
of Member States to join, the newspaper covered an item on the
audit interns from candidate countries. New for us, but also new for
them.
Insights into performance auditing
Besides doing new professional ‘discoveries,’ the most impressive
thing was working in a multicultural and multilingual environment,
which I still enjoy very much to this day. I highly appreciated the
support of the ECA colleagues for their guidance and kind support
Tomas Mackevičius
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ECA traineeship for auditors of candidate countries: a portal for professional development
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in professional but also personal matters. I was impressed by the professional and
systematic way in which auditors performed their tasks. In comparison with my
national office, the ECA was particularly more advanced in auditing performance
issues. During my five months internship I learned a great deal on this in theory
and in practice, which I used a lot after going back to Lithuania.
One of the tasks I was assigned to was the audit of effectiveness of environmental
projects funded by EU Pre-accession funds. Some projects funded in Lithuania
were selected for an on the spot visit. After my return to the Lithuanian national
audit office, I continued with this audit by assisting the ECA audit team in auditing
projects on the spot in Lithuania. Moreover, some of the selected projects I
audited myself as a ‘national’ auditor, which resulted in a report of the Lithuanian
SAI and subsequently contributed to an ECA special report.
Back home on a fast-track career path
The internship has had a great influence on my future career and further
specialization in audit. Soon after my return to Lithuania, I got the position of
Head of Unit and later of Director of Department in charge of auditing EU pre-
accession and post-accession funds in Lithuania. The National Audit Office was
specifically assigned by law to audit EU funds within the control framework of the
EU. This meant that my team and I were charged with duties rarely performed by
other SAIs – the Certifying Body for EU agricultural funds and the Audit Authority
for EU structural funds with direct reporting responsibilities to the Commission.
With the work done in this particular role, and the impressive efforts made by my
former colleagues, the National Audit Office of Lithuania is now one of the leading
audit authorities in the EU when it comes to auditing the European Structural and
Investment Funds.
A certain highlight of my professional activity was my appointment to the post
of Deputy Auditor General in 2006 by the President of the Republic of Lithuania.
Subsequently, my audit responsibilities became much broader than EU funds,
which significantly enhanced my further professional development. Finally, in
2010, nine years after my internship, I came back to the Court as Head of the
Private Office of Rasa Budbergytė, then ECA Member, and I presently serve as
Attaché in the Private Office of Rimantas Šadžius, ECA Member, employing my
knowledge and experience for the benefit of the EU project.
Enabling professional evolution and triggering change
For me the internship proved to be an excellent tool that gives indispensable
opportunities to learn and develop. For me it was definitely a driving force
behind my professional evolution. Such internships also allow to build social and
professional networks, enabling the sharing of knowledge between different
people, institutions and countries, and even contribute to fostering developments
in SAIs. Last but certainly not least, a few long lasting friendships and very warm
memories remain invaluable.
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ECA traineeship for auditors of candidate countries: a portal for professional development
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continued
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Applying what I learnt at the ECA
By Jolita Korzuniene
A complex audit landscape
In 2003 I got selected for a five-month internship at the ECA. At that
time, I was working as a chief auditor at the National Audit Office of
the Republic of Lithuania. In October, I arrived in Luxembourg and
was assigned to the directorate responsible for auditing external
action, and within that the ‘Central and Eastern European Countries
and New Independent States Division,’ headed by Ossi Louko. I
joined the team of Lars Markström (my tutor) who was a team leader
for the DAS audit of the PHARE programme, the EU Pre-accession
instrument of those days.
Soon after my arrival, I saw that the audit practice and approach
at the ECA was quite different from my experiences in Lithuania.
In Vilnius the annual financial audit process focused on a single
auditee and analysed various budget lines and balances. At the
ECA the audits seemed more complex: the number of auditees
was rather substantial as the programmes involved many Member
States, a large number of different supported activities and various
implementing bodies.
I was involved in auditing the PHARE programme, the EU's initiative
that provided grant finance to support its partner countries to
the stage where they are ready to assume the obligations of
membership of the European Union. The audit team carried out
substantive testing of the PHARE 2000 Economic and Social Cohesion
programme, including in Lithuania. We audited beneficiaries and
the regional project-implementing units. At the rather early stage
of implementation of EU programmes in Lithuania, our visit was
sometimes stressful for the auditees. However, at a same time,
particularly for us, very useful, since we got many important
questions related to programme management clarified.
Applying ECA experiences back home
At that time the ECA only started implementing ASSYST I, the
ECA’s internal audit management programme. Our audit was a
pilot project to document missions and file working papers for
a first time on this IT system. I studied, with great interest, the
functionalities of the programme. It was very useful, since after my
return from the internship to the National Audit Office of Lithuania I
helped to develop a new audit documentation system there. Other
valuable experiences that stand out for me were participating in the
traditional workshop of the directorate, where I made presentations
on DAS audit missions and learned about experiences of other
colleagues, and the many trainings, enhancing my knowledge on EU
budget management.
The internship served favourably for my future professional
development and my career: soon after my return in Lithuania,
I was appointed as Deputy Director of the Performance Audit
Jolita Korzuniene
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ECA traineeship for auditors of candidate countries: a portal for professional development
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61
Department. I got involved in the development of the performance audit
manual, preparation of the annual audit programmes and implementation of
the quality control procedures. Two years later, I lead the department dealing
with the preparation of the annual audit report on the national budget and
state debt. Here, my understanding about the systematic approach for
financial and compliance audit used in the ECA helped me to further develop
the methodological approach of state budget auditing.
Cooperative spirit for the benefit of EU programme management
Back on Lithuania, my best ECA memories were related to the friendly
atmosphere in the sector, which was the merit of all the staff working there.
I appreciated very much the help and heartiness of my dear colleagues,
especially Lars Markström and Tim Upton, my teammates. Professionalism of
the ECA staff was a good driver in my personal development.
Coming back to the ECA in 2009 was like coming back to the place where I
knew I would be feeling like home: nice colleagues, good working conditions,
and interesting topics. I worked for many years in the Transport and Energy
Performance Audit Unit and I continue working in the directorate responsible
for auditing EU Structural Funds. Starting with my internship I got to realise
how important it is to have close connections with national Supreme
Audit Institutions. We can learn a lot from each other and I believe that a
cooperative spirit – in the sense of working together - helps to improve the
management of EU funded programmes.
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62
Meeting of Central and Eastern European SAIs and the ECA, Luxembourg 21 November 2000
Roots of the cooperation
between ECA and candidate
countries’ SAIs: it all started
in the mid-1990s
Interview with Dirk Pauwels,
Private Office of Danièle Lamarque, ECA Member
By Gaston Moonen, Directorate of the Presidency
Following the fall of the Berlin
wall and the subsequent
historic changes in Central and
Eastern European countries,
the possibility of European
integration and even accession
to the EU began to dawn. In
the mid-1990s the ECA began
to reflect on how it might
contribute to such integration,
not only through auditing but
also by helping to build capacity
in its specific area of expertise,
external audit. Dirk Pauwels,
who joined the ECA at that time,
vividly recalls the ECA’s first steps
in assisting and cooperating
with candidate countries’ SAIs,
whether newly established
or eager to reform, in their
capacity-building efforts.
The beginnings of cooperation between the candidate countries’
SAIs and the ECA
Dirk Pauwels revisits the first steps towards cooperation taken
between 1994 and 1996: ‘Discussions between the EU and the Central
and Eastern European Countries intensified in view of accession
negotiations. EU budgets for technical and other assistance increased
in the region and so did our audit activities. Through the contacts
we had as external auditor with the national administrations, we
received multiple requests for cooperation with national external audit
institutions.’ He points out that the ECA had responded positively by
organising the first ever meeting with Central and Eastern European
SAIs, which was held on 23 October 1996 in Luxembourg. The
presidents of 12 SAIs were present, two of whom would later become
ECA Members: Anton Antončič of the Slovenian SAI and Janusz
Wojciechowski of the Polish SAI, who has been a Member since 2016.’
According to Dirk, the results of the meeting were first formulated in
a number of basic principles and priorities: ‘The presidents signed a
declaration whereby they agreed - on a voluntary basis - to develop
the audit cooperation with the ECA and also to find ways to develop
the capacity of their institutions. They agreed to prepare concrete
proposals for a next meeting.
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Interview with Dirk Pauwels, Private Office of Danièle Lamarque, ECA Member
continued
63
Putting intentions into practice
Dirk describs the prompt, concrete follow-up in the form of, what he
views as, rather impressive innovative actions: ‘After the meeting in
Luxemburg in 1996, the Polish SAI, the NIK, organised, together with
the ECA, a second meeting of Central and Eastern European SAIs.
This was in Warsaw in March 1998. I remember the very impressive
opening speeches of Bronislav Geremek, Minister of Foreign Affairs -
and convinced European - as well as that of the chair of the European
regional organisation of SAIs, Lubomir Volenik, President of the Czech
SAI. The 13 Presidents present decided to focus cooperation on two
aspects: firstly, the institutional strengthening of SAIs and, secondly,
the role SAIs could play in preparing their country to EU membership.’
Dirk cites some of the concrete actions agreed. ‘A number of SAIs had
questioned what convergence criteria should be applied on their
institution for EU integration. They had found little concrete guidance
in the INTOSAI [the global umbrella organisation for SAIs] documents
as these were of a general nature and contained no concrete tools for
institutional or capacity building. The Presidents therefore decided
to work on the definition of convergence criteria.’ He continues by
explaining that the participants had also agreed that professional
training was a prerequisite, if SAIs were to integrate effectively into
the EU: ‘So they decided to work on professional training strategies,
training programmes and training activities.’
Another specific issue concerned the matter of audit methodology:
‘One of the returning questions at the time was the necessity to
develop audit methodology and to agree on basic auditing standards
to be applied in a European environment. As I said, at that time –
and fortunately it improved a lot - INTOSAI standards only had a
very general character. Therefore, the ECA developed the European
Implementing Standards for the INTOSAI Auditing Standards.’ He
adds that these appeared to be very useful to colleagues in the SAIs,
where they were used extensively. ‘Therefore, the ECA translated the
document in[to] all the languages concerned.’
In Dirk’s view, another practical decision was taken during the
Warsaw meeting. ‘The presidents of the 12 SAIs of the Central and
Eastern European countries present and the ECA decided to establish
a permanent structure for cooperation. Similar to the Contact
Committee of European Union SAIs, this would consist of liaison
officers’ meetings and Presidents’ meetings.’
Looking into the implementation of the acquis
T
he second matter on which the 1998 Warsaw meeting focused was
that of the role SAIs could play in preparing their countries for EU
membership during the accession procedure. When discussing this,
Dirk recalls, ‘Yes, this was something very new to all. In fact, during the
accession process a SAI can play an active and positive role in verifying
the implementation of, for example, the
acquis communautaire
and
related aspects, thereby looking also into a country’s capability to take
on the obligations of EU membership. This also meant looking into
institutional capacity.’
... during the accession
process a SAI can play
an active and positive
role in verifying the
implementation [...] This
also meant looking into
institutional capacity.
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Interview with Dirk Pauwels, Private Office of Danièle Lamarque, ECA Member
continued
64
He explains that, in order to achieve this and carry out an assessment,
the Presidents decided to start building up expertise, knowledge and
experience in these areas. ‘Guidance was prepared enabling interested
SAIs to apply an active approach in the accession process. Making such
guidance and sharing this [are] key elements of so-called ‘knowledge
sharing.’
The ECA’s specific role in SAI capacity-building
When it comes to concrete ECA action in the area of capacity building,
Dirk observes that the ECA took a rather practical approach. ‘I think
the ECA realised from the beginning that it does not have the capacity
nor the financial resources to be a driving force in this process. A lot of
the activities required different forms of technical assistance.’ However,
Dirk also points to another problem: ‘The typical technical assistance
financed by the Commission was provided by private companies which
had - and perhaps have - limited capacity and knowledge in the area
of public external auditing. Secondly, the technical assistance financed
by the Commission focused on national ministries and administrations
but it did not include SAIs. The ECA therefore supported the idea to
include SAIs in the pre-accession assistance programmes provided by
the Commission.’
Regarding the issue - with the Commission providing the financing -
who was to provide the expertise if the private sector could not offer
what was needed, Dirk replies, ‘The ECA suggested developing such
activities through SIGMA [Support for Improvement in Governance and
Management managed by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
and Development], which could call on expertise from national SAIs
whilst receiving financial support from the European Commission. I
remember that the first stone of this support structure was laid during
an informal meeting in our old ‘antenna’ office in Rue de la Loi in
Brussels during a meeting between representatives of both the ECA
and the Commission, and Kjell Larsson of SIGMA. Later on Kjell Larsson
played a very important role in the development of capacity-building
projects and providing technical assistance for SAIs in candidate
countries.’
According to Dirk, besides supporting the initiative of setting up
SIGMA, the ECA lent experienced ECA staff to provide advice to any
SAIs interested, either via SIGMA or directly, on a limited basis. ‘In
addition, ECA expertise was provided by ECA staff going on more
long-term secondments to SAIs, mostly after a country had become
an EU Member. Such secondments still continue between EU SAIs, the
ECA receiving also secondments from national audit offices. And then
there is, of course, the internship programme with SAIs of [potential]
candidate countries. But I understand that this is covered more
extensively elsewhere in the ECA Journal.’
... the ECA realised from
the beginning that it does
not have the capacity nor
the financial resources to
be a driving force in this
process.
The ECA suggested
developing such activities
[providing expertise]
through SIGMA...
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65
Reaching out
The Summer School in public auditing and accountability -
auditors and academics exploring data analytics
By Gilberto Moggia, Information, Workplace and Innovation Directorate
The ECA, the University of Pisa and the Association of
Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) jointly organised
the first ‘Summer School in Public Auditing and
Accountability’ in Pisa (Italy). The aim was to examine
emerging issues in data analytics, which appears to be a
powerful driver of change in audit. Gilberto Moggia, who
was heavily involved in setting up the programme and
rolling it out, provides further details.
Gilberto Moggia in Pisa
The School - a new learning opportunity for European auditors
To keep pace with innovation, auditors and audit organisations need to monitor
and understand emerging trends and technologies, which have potential not
only to improve, but often also to disrupt current audit practice. This is the
raison d’être
of the School: instead of focusing on consolidated audit techniques
and practices, the three organising bodies chose to design the School as a new
learning opportunity for European auditors, where the focus is on emerging
global issues that are particularly relevant for the future of the audit profession.
Data analytics is one such emerging issue and a powerful driver of evolution in
audit: before our very eyes, digital technology is changing the nature of audit in
both the private and public sectors. No doubt about it, digital technology has
revealed new audit opportunities that audit organisations can ill afford to neglect
if they want to remain relevant in changing times. But incorporating analytics
into audit is not without its challenges. One of the main challenges facing our
organisations is the lack of the necessary technical skills to analyse data flows.
In fact, making sense of data for auditing is a complex operation that means
combining diverse disciplines and skills which are not typically to be found in the
toolbox of professional auditors.
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The Summer School in public auditing and accountability - auditors and academics exploring
data analytics
continued
66
Auditors and academics exploring
opportunities and challenges of data
analytics
The 2018 edition of the School offered a highly
intensive immersion course in data analytics.
The instructors gave the 45 participants
original insights into current trends, focusing
on the practical implications for audit. The
ECA and its partners successfully brought
together a number of respected academics and
practitioners to speak on all the main aspects
of data analytics for auditing. We welcomed
instructors from the University of Pisa and other
leading universities, the EU institutions, the
OECD, SAIs and the private audit sector.
Participation was not restricted to ECA auditors.
The participants came from a wide range of
public audit organisations: 22 from the EU institutions (ECA, Court of Justice,
Commission and Investment Bank) and 18 from twelve European SAIs (Austria,
Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Malta,
Sweden and Switzerland). We were also delighted to welcome three PhD
students from the University of Pisa and two private auditors.
The training objective: improving core analytical capabilities
The discussions in Pisa showed that some SAIs have been making considerable
progress in the area of digital audit. In general, however, the establishment
of core analytical capabilities is still in its infancy. Moreover, our organisations
do not yet readily share with each other the expertise essential for successful
data-driven audit. In this regard, Pisa represented a very good opportunity for a
fruitful exchange of knowledge and good practice, both among auditors from
a range of audit organisations and between academia and the audit profession.
In the course of the week, teachers and participants analysed the new audit
opportunities offered by data analytics, seeking to identify and assess the
related risks, evaluate methods and solutions, appraise tools and technologies,
and suggest how best to update our professional practice.
A learning path in six modules
Data analytics demands a rich mix of knowledge, methods and technologies,
all of which are necessary for processing large volumes of complex and
heterogeneous data for audit. To cover the main aspects of such a labyrinthine
topic, the course content was organised in six modules as follows:
Module 1 – Extracting value from data:
introducing participants to the main
aspects of the big data phenomenon: its overall importance and the main
opportunities and challenges of it, the IT implications and risks, and the legal
issues raised for public administrations by working with data;
Module 2 – Data analytics for auditing:
outlining the concepts and definitions
of data analytics in the context of auditing and the wide range of methods and
techniques needed for a successful implementation of data analytics in our
organisations;
2018 Summer School session in Pisa.
From left to right: Michael Kell (UK
NAO), Guiseppe D’Onza (University of
Pisa), Maggie McGhee (ACCA), Eduardo
Ruiz Garcia (ECA)
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The Summer School in public auditing and accountability - auditors and academics exploring
data analytics
continued
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Module
3
–Statistical
methods and techniques for data analysis: offering an
overview on the main statistical techniques for data analytics and on the specific
developments related to the use of big data for statistics;
Module 4 – Data-driven audit – case studies & field experiences:
opening the
floor to participants to present their results in data-driven audit practice;
Module 5 – IT methods and techniques for data analysis:
: introducing the
participants to the comprehension of the main IT methods for data analytics,
including those necessary for machine learning and predictive analysis;
Module 6 – Data mining and analytics - implications for the audit profession:
discussing the challenges for the audit Institutions of incorporating analytics into
audit and what public audit institutions should take into consideration when
planning and developing their new capabilities.
Pisa and beyond
It is impossible to summarise the richness of the week’s presentations and
discussions in just a few lines. However, it is worth emphasising two key messages.
Firstly, digital audit is about the efficient use of technology, but auditors do not
need to become software developers or computer programmers to take full
advantage. What they do need is to understand the key elements of the IT involved
(such as the functioning of algorithms) so that they can generate new kinds of
insights from data. It is essential for auditors to acquire some hands-on knowledge
and experience and a high degree of comfort in using technology to process and
analyse data.
Secondly, to successfully implement data analytics for audit it is crucial to
combine the skills of data analysts with the professional mind-set and approach
of auditors. To promote data-driven audit, the ECA and other SAIs should set up
multidisciplinary teams. With the help of data analysts, and powered by innovative
technologies, auditors will have the resources, tools and time to apply their
professional scepticism and judgement to generating new insights.
Data-driven audit is a new field now under development. Encouraged by the
participants’ very positive evaluation of the course, the ECA intends to continue the
work begun in Pisa so as to facilitate knowledge-sharing on innovative practices.
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ECA publications in July-September 2018
Background paper
EU Auditors to examine VAT and customs duties in e-commerce
The European Court of Auditors is conducting an audit to find out how effectively the
EU is addressing the challenges posed by e-commerce in terms of VAT and customs
duties. They will examine the European Commission’s regulatory and control framework
for e-commerce and cooperation between Member States to ensure that VAT and
customs duties on e-commerce transactions are collected in full. The auditors have
today published a Background Paper on the collection of VAT and customs duties on
e-commerce as a source of information for those interested in the subject.
Click here for our report
Published on 05 July 2018
Briefing paper
The Commission’s proposal for the 2021-2027 Multiannual
Financial Framework
On 2 May 2018 the Commission published a package of legal proposals and
accompanying explanatory documents for the new Multiannual Financial Framework
(MFF) – a seven-year budget for the European Union for the 2021-2027 period.
In this briefing paper we focus on the proposed MFF Regulation, the MFF Communication
and the accompanying Spending Review.
Click here for our report
Published on 10 July 2018
Special Report N° 18
Is the main objective of the preventive arm of the Stability and
Growth Pact delivered?
The European Commission has exercised discretionary powers granted by the preventive
arm regulation very extensively with a view to reduce the adjustment requirements, both
by setting the implementation rules and in individual decisions.
We consider that the combination of the current matrix parameters, allowed deviations
and flexibility clauses cumulatively erode the target set in the Regulation which is to
achieve an average annual adjustment of 0.5 % of GDP over the cycle. This prevents that
the Medium Term Objectives of member states are reached within a reasonable period.
Particularly worrisome is very slow, or even absent adjustment in several member states
with high public debt ratio.
The implementation rules and Commission’s practice therefore need to be reviewed and
strengthened.
Click here for our report
Published on 12 July 2018
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ECA publications in July-September 2018
Opinion No 1/2018
Opinion No 1/2018
Opinion No 1/2018 concerning the proposal of 2 May 2018 for a regulation of the
European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of the Union's budget in case
of generalised deficiencies as regards the rule of law in the Member States
Click here for our report
Published on17 July 2018
Background paper
The Fund for European Aid to the Most Deprived (FEAD)
The European Court of Auditors is conducting an audit of the Fund for European Aid to
the Most Deprived (FEAD). The Fund seeks to help lift the most deprived people in the
EU out of poverty and foster their social integration by combining material and food aid,
along with specific advice and social inclusion measures. The auditors will assess the initial
set-up of the FEAD and examine whether the Member States’ programmes are effective in
targeting the most deprived. They will also review the performance measurement put in
place by the Commission to determine the Fund’s contribution towards meeting the EU’s
poverty reduction target.
Click here for our report
Published on 30 August 2018
Landscape Review
Putting EU law into practice: The European Commission’s oversight
responsibilities under Article 17(1) of the Treaty on European Union
Opportunities exist for the European Commission to further strengthen its oversight of
the way EU law is applied in the Member States, according to a new Landscape Review
by the European Court of Auditors. The review looks at the Commission’s oversight
activities and identifies challenges and opportunities ahead. It also points to the need
for transparency, accountability and audit in applying EU law.
Published on
3 September 2018
Click here for our report
Special Report N° 21
Cohesion policy: emphasis still on outputs rather than
resultsEuropean Union
Project selection procedures in Cohesion policy still emphasise outputs and spending
rather than results, despite a longstanding intention to improve matters, according
to a new report from the European Court of Auditors. Moreover, say the auditors,
shortcomings in monitoring make it difficult to assess the extent to which EU funding
has contributed to EU and Member State objectives.
Published on
4 September 2018
Click here for our report
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ECA publications in July-September 2018
Special Report N° 22
Erasmus+: a successful European brand, but needs better
performance measurement
Student mobility under the Erasmus+ programme generates many forms of European
added value and has a positive effect on participants’ attitudes towards the EU,
according to a new report from the European Court of Auditors; countries would not
be able to achieve such effects acting alone. However, the auditors found that the
indicators used to measure the Programme’s performance should be better aligned with
its objectives. They add that application and reporting processes are still too complex,
despite some simplification.
Published on
6 September 2018
Click here for our report
Special Report N° 23
Air pollution: Our health still insufficiently protected
Air pollution causes great harm to European citizens’ health. Each year, about 400 000
people die prematurely due to excessive air pollutants such as dust particles, nitrogen
dioxide and ozone. For about 30 years, the EU has had clean air legislation that sets
limits to the concentrations of pollutants in the air. Nevertheless, bad air is still common
today in most of the EU Member States and in numerous European cities. We found
that European citizens still breathe harmful air mostly due to weak legislation and poor
policy implementation. Our recommendations aim to strengthen the Ambient Air
Quality Directive and to promote further effective action by the European Commission
and the Member States, including better policy coordination and public information.
Click here for our report
Published on
11 September 2018
Background paper
Enforcement of EU competition policy
The European Court of Auditors has today published a Background Paper on the
enforcement of the EU’s competition rules. Background Papers provide information on
ongoing audit tasks and are designed as a source of information for those interested in
the policy and/or programmes being audited.
Click here for our report
Published on
12 September 2018
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ECA publications in July-September 2018
Special Report N° 17
Using Cohesion funds money should not become an end in itself
The European Commission and Member States should make more effective use of
Cohesion funding, according to a new report from the European Court of Auditors.
Delays in finalising the legal framework and slow progress with spending plans put
national administrations under pressure to use the money quickly, sometimes at the
expense of performance, warn the auditors. The Commission was late in addressing
spending difficulties in some programmes; however, its actions and those of the
Member States had a positive impact on absorption.
Published on
13 September 2018
Click here for our report
Special Report N° 20
The African Peace and Security Architecture:
need to refocus EU support
EU financial support for the African Peace and Security Architecture (APSA) has had a
poor effect and needs refocusing, according to a new report from the European Court of
Auditors. For many years, the APSA has been heavily dependent on donor funding and
EU support has been focusing on contributing to its basic operational costs rather than
on capacity-building measures, say the auditors.
Click here for our report
Published on
September 2018
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ISSN 1831-449X
05
08
Political will is essential for accession progress
Perspective of EU membership important driver for
progress and reconciliation in Western Balkans
Auditing Turkey: from EU pre-accession to migration
management
‘Enlargement process as occasion for the EU to reinvent
and reform itself’
Capacity building in EU candidate countries in the area
of financial control: some personal experiences and
thoughts
EDITION
HIGHLIGHTS
23
38
41
COVER:
Fictitious car registration plates symbolising countries' aspirations for EU membership
Source: © ECA
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