
The members of the committee were approved at a separate vote on the same day.
The committee will have 50 members and its main task will be to prepare work on the EU’s next long-term budget framework (also known as the ‘financial perspective’ or multiannual financial framework) starting from 2014. The current long-term budget framework covers 2007-2013.
The formal description of the new committee’s work is ‘the policy challenges and budgetary resources for a sustainable European Union after 2013’, which includes six key tasks:
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to define Parliament’s priorities for the EU’s next long-term budget framework, in both political and budgetary terms,
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to estimate how much money the EU will need to achieve its objectives,
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to define the duration of the next long-term budget framework (this has traditionally been seven years but MEPs want to adjust it to match the mandates of the Parliament and the Commission),
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to propose a structure for future long-term budget frameworks,
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to draw up guidelines on how resources should be distributed within and between different parts (‘headings’) of the EU budget,
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to specify the link between a reform of the EU’s financing system and a review of expenditure, so as to provide the Budgets Committee with a basis for the forthcoming negotiations.
The committee will present the results of its work in a report, to be approved by Parliament before July 2011, when the Commission is to present its proposal for the next meeting.
The new committee is scheduled to have its first meeting during the July session in Strasbourg. At this meeting the members will elect a chair, a vice-chair and a rapporteur.
Background
The European Parliament currently a special committee on the Financial, Economic and Social Crisis. One role of the new committee would be to follow up the work of the special committee.
During preparations for the current long-term budget framework, in 2004/2005, MEPs also set up a temporary committee.