EU confirms Ayuk call

When African attorney-entrepreneur NJ Ayuk declared recently that the financial aid from the west to Africa was more harm than good, it was startling, as the truth always is.
And now an EU report has confirmed that financial aid, at least to Morocco, isn’t really working out.

According to the report by the European Court of Auditors (ECA) (www.ECA.Europa.eu), EU financial aid for Morocco, delivered through direct transfers to its treasury from 2014 to 2018, provided limited added value and ability to support its reforms.

The European Commission addressed the needs identified in national and EU strategies, but it spread the funding across too many areas, which may have weakened its impact, say the auditors. They also found the Commission’s management of budget support programmes for the country was hampered by weaknesses in the way they were designed, implemented and monitored, as well as in the assessment of results.

The EU is Morocco’s biggest donor of development aid. For 2014-2020, it programmed €1.4bn of aid, mainly for the three priority sectors: social services, rule of law and sustainable growth. By the end of 2018, it had concluded contracts for €562m and made payments of almost €206m under its budget support instrument which is aimed at promoting reforms and sustainable development goals and makes up 75 % of EU annual spending for the country.

The auditors assessed whether the Commission’s management of EU budget support for the priority sectors in Morocco from 2014 to 2018 was effective and whether the objectives were achieved. They examined the areas of health, social protection, justice and private sector development.

EU budget support for Morocco did not provide sufficient support for the country’s reforms and progress on key challenges was limited,” said Hannu Takkula, the ECA Member responsible for the report. “To maximise the impact of EU funding, the Commission should focus support on fewer sectors and strengthen the political and policy dialogue with Morocco.”

The Commission had assessed the needs and risks appropriately and considered budget support to be the right instrument for delivering aid to Morocco. Currently, the EU’s average budget support of around €132m per yearr. As a result, its overall leverage is limited. At the same time, the auditors found that significant amounts of ministerial budgets remained unspent, which calls into question the added value of the EU’s financial aid.

The Commission had defined the three priority sectors. The auditors found, however, that they consisted of 13 sub-sectors, many of which could be considered as stand-alone sectors. The auditors warn that such a broad definition of eligible areas covering a large number of sectors reduces the potential impact of EU support. They also point out the Commission had not allocated funding to sectoral programmes using a transparent method and coordination of donors amongst the sectors was uneven.

The programmes are currently still ongoing, but have so far showed no significant impact, as less than half of their targets had been achieved by the end of 2018. In addition, a number of these targets were not ambitious enough to support meaningful reforms, since they had sometimes already been met (or were close to being achieved) when the financing agreements were signed. The auditors found that rigorous controls on assessing results were lacking and payments were sometimes made when targets had not been achieved and even when the situation actually deteriorated. There was also limited progress on some cross-cutting issues.

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