From the European Semester to the Recovery and Resilience Facility:
Some social actors are (not) resurfacing
Vanhercke, Bart ; Verdun, Amy ; Atanasova, Angelina ; Spasova, Slavina ; Thomson, Malcolm
European Trade Union Institute, Brussels
ETUI - Brussels
2021
48 p.
economic recovery ; EU policy ; EU economic governance ; social policy ; epidemic disease
Working Paper
2021.13
Public finance and taxation
English
Bibliogr.
1994-4446
11.01-68376
"In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, major financial support has been pledged to Member States. This funding draws on the EU's multiannual financial framework and the ‘NextGenerationEU' with, at its core, the temporary ‘Recovery and Resilience Facility' (RRF). While some reporting templates have been newly invented, others are linked to the European Semester.
This report examines how and why the Semester became part of the governance of the RRF. We also ask to what extent this new set-up has changed the power balance among key EU actors (for example, financial and economic actors versus institutional social affairs actors)? Drawing on extensive document analysis and 32 semi-structured elite interviews, the findings suggest that initially, due to the crisis (and desire for fast action), there was a serious risk that EU institutional social actors were losing the prominence they had previously earned. They gradually reclaimed their position as the immediacy of the crisis subsided and a longer-term focus emerged. EU civil servants also engaged with social partners on both sides of industry, even though it is questionable whether this consultation has been really meaningful.
EU civil society organisations (CSOs) have been largely sidelined in the RRF process; and likewise in most Member States, consultation with domestic stakeholders (both social partners and CSOs) has remained insufficient by any standard. The European Parliament was reasonably successful in securing its substantive impact during the RRF negotiations. But it has since failed to insert itself into the approval and assessment procedures applicable to the EU's recovery programme."
Digital;Paper
ISBN (PDF) : 1994-4454
Legal deposit : D/2021/10.574/31
The ETUI is co-funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the ETUI.