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European Union countries are failing in the promise to make the common fisheries policy more transparent, claims a new report from FishSubsidy.org. With the policy undergoing a fundamental review, the report—“Slipping through the net: How EU countries evade new budget transparency rules”, by investigative journalist Brigitte Alfter—provides a timely overview of access to information about EU fish subsidies and illustrates how weakness in the legal framework for transparency and bureaucratic obfuscation by member states are making it harder for EU citizens to know how their money is being spent.
In 2005, Europe’s administrative, audit and anti-fraud commissioner, Siim Kallas, launched the European Transparency Initiative, a project aimed at improving transparency at the EU level. Member states are required to publish the names of subsidy recipients and their operations, and the amounts of public funding allocated since 1 May 2007. However, as the report shows, access to this information is far from perfect.
First of all the report evaluates whether member states are meeting their legal requirments: several are not. Second, the report examines four measures of accessibility: Is the information easily accessible? Is the information presented in English or in one of the other EU working languages? Is the format user-friendly? And is it possible to download the information per member state and year in csv or spreadsheet format in order to analyse the data?
"This report reveals an equal measures of bureaucratic incompetence and obfuscation. It should be a wake up call to the Commission and a strong indictment of member states who do not appear to take budget transparency seriously."
Jack Thurston, Executive Director of EU Transparency
Errors, misinformation and difficulty accessing information has significant policy implications, says Alfter, as it makes it difficult for citizens, journalists and public-interest groups to assess the information. “With the introduction of the European Transparency Initiative, the cumbersome process of making access to documents requests relating to EU funds paid under the Common Fisheries Policies should have become unnecessary. Citizens, journalists, political parties and public-interest groups should have direct access to the information – making it easier for citizens and public officials at national and EU-level alike. Unfortunately, this has not happened.” Alfter explains. “The publication of names of beneficiaries represents real progress in budget transparency but this has been accompanied by a reduction in the quality and detail of data and its fragmentation into dozens of often inaccessible sources. With the responsibility for publication of data - including the choice of data format - left to member states, European citizens are cast into a maze of different languages, formats, places and modes of publication.”
Jack Thurston, Executive Director of EU Transparency, and co-founder of both farmsubsidy.org and its new sister project fishsubsidy.org adds:
“The aims of the European Transparency Initiative are laudable but too often the ball has been dropped at the implementation stage. Brigitte Alfter, one of Europe’s most accomplished investigative journalists, has found it wildly frustrating to access to the kind of budget data that ought to be the right of every EU citizen. What hope is there for ordinary members of the public to find out how their money has been spent? This report reveals an equal measures of bureaucratic incompetence and obfuscation. It should be a wake up call to the Commission and a strong indictment of member states who do not appear to take budget transparency seriously.”
In her report, Alfter recommends the following:
Download the report or read it online
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