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The Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance

The Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance. An overview Esmeralda Hernandez Aragones Counsellor, Head of the Economic and European Integration Section Delegation of the European Commission 07 December 2005. The Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance.

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The Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance

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  1. The Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance An overview Esmeralda Hernandez Aragones Counsellor, Head of the Economic and European Integration Section Delegation of the European Commission 07 December 2005

  2. The Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance • An integrated Pre-Accession Instrument to assist candidate (Croatia, Turkey) and potential candidate (Western Balkan) countries • Replaces the current pre-accession instruments (Phare, ISPA, SAPARD and Turkey pre-accession instruments) as well as the CARDS instrument • Financial envelope (2007–13) proposed by the Commission: 12 919 million €(constant prices) (to be modified according to the agreement on Financial Perspectives)

  3. Specificities of pre-accession aid • Accession and pre-accession driven instrument (European and Accession Partnerships, Regular Reports, etc.) • Medium term perspective • Bridging function for accession

  4. Aims of IPA Potential candidates: support for participation in the Stabilisation and Association process all the way to their future accession Candidate countries: full pre-accession support to help countries to: • Adopt and implement the acquis • Implement EU funds on accession

  5. Structure of the IPA Five components: • Transition Assistance and Institution Building (I) • Regional and Cross-Border Co-operation (II) • Regional Development (III) • Human Resources Development (IV) • Rural Development (V)

  6. Transition Assistance and Institution Building Applies to both categories of countries: • Transition assistance for potential Candidate Countries (Western Balkans) • Institution building for both potential Candidate and Candidate Countries

  7. Regional and Cross-Border Co-operation Applies to both categories of countries: • Regional co-operation among all Western Balkan countries (multi-country programme) • CBC at borders with the EU and, as appropriate, at borders between candidate/potential candidates. • Participation in trans-national and inter-regional co-operation, as appropriate

  8. Regional Development Applies to Candidate Countries which operate on a decentralised management basis only • Emulates ERDF and Cohesion Fund approach • Finance investments and technical assistance • Preparation for Structural and Cohesion Funds

  9. Human Resources Development Applies to Candidate Countries which operate on a decentralised management basis only • Emulates ESF approach • Finance ESF-type measures, as provided for in the ESF Regulation • Preparation for Structural Funds

  10. Rural Development Applies to Candidate Countries which operate on an extended decentralised management basis only • Emulates the post-accession Rural Development programmes • Finance Rural Development-type measures, as provided for in the future EAFRD Regulation • Preparation for Rural Development Fund

  11. Implementing Regulation • A single Implementing regulation, aiming at harmonising implementing rules between components, whenever this is more efficient and/or effective • Components may apply different implementing methods where this is justified by the need to anticipate the Structural, Cohesion and Rural Development Funds implementing modalities and institutional framework • Detailed implementing rules currently prepared by the Commission

  12. General policy and programming framework • Political and Financial Framework : Multi- annual Indicative Financial Framework (MIFF), per country and per component, 3 years rolling forward, included in enlargement package. • Strategic programming: Multi-annual Indicative Planning Documents (MIPD), per country and for all components, following the logic of the MIFF. • Specific programming by country and by component

  13. Conclusions • For the Commission, building on lessons learned: • more coherence and co-ordination in Assistance under IPA for all beneficiary countries • For candidates, better preparation for Structural, Cohesion and Rural development Funds through progressive emulation of EU funds rules • For the beneficiary country • get started as soon as possible to prepare the necessary structures and programming documents

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