Activities and orientations of the Council of Europe Development Bank (CEB)
Recommendation 1818
(2007)
- Author(s):
- Parliamentary Assembly
- Origin
- Text
adopted by the Standing Committee, acting on behalf of
the Assembly, on 23 November 2007 (see Doc. 11306, report of the Committee on Economic Affairs and Development,
rapporteur: Mr Braun; and Doc. 11358, opinion of the Committee on Migration, Refugees and
Population, rapporteur: Mr Zernovski).
- Thesaurus
1. The Parliamentary Assembly has
examined the activities of the Council of Europe Development Bank (CEB)
over the 2004-2006 period. It has noted the sound overall performance
of the bank in keeping with its mission to assist vulnerable populations
and to respond to development and reconstruction needs in disadvantaged
regions, especially as a result of natural disasters and forced
population movements. The CEB’s social vocation is what distinguishes
it from other banks and furthers the Council of Europe’s values
in building a more just and harmonious society in Europe.
2. The Assembly welcomes the recent accession of Ireland and
Georgia to the CEB and an intensified geographical redeployment
of CEB funding towards the target group of countries in central,
eastern and south-eastern Europe over the past few years from 48%
of projects approved in 2004 to 80% in 2006. It hopes that this
trend will be sustained in the future, thus allowing the CEB to
concentrate an even larger share of resources on its non-European
Union member states, in particular Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Moldova, Serbia, “the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” and
Georgia, that face specific development problems and difficulties
in accessing international financial markets on favourable terms.
3. The action of the CEB and that of the Council of Europe are
complementary and mutually beneficial. This relationship could be
further enhanced, especially as regards the identification and preparation
of worthy projects. The Assembly, in this context, recalls the Council
of Europe’s 2004 revised Strategy for Social Cohesion, pointing
out that there has to be a special commitment by the governments
of member states to protect the human rights of people who are at
risk of becoming vulnerable, such as children, the young, migrants,
ethnic minorities, people with disabilities and the elderly. This
responsibility needs to be translated into specific actions at national
level by making the best possible use of national resources and,
where appropriate, benefiting from the CEB’s and the Council of
Europe’s experience and capacities in this domain.
4. Given that aid to refugees and migrants remains one of its
statutory priorities, the bank should increase its efforts, particularly
with non-European Union member states in south-eastern Europe and
the Caucasus region, with a view to developing and funding projects
for the benefit of refugees and displaced persons in the war-affected
regions. To this effect, the Assembly welcomes the initiative of
the CEB to seek formal partnerships with the United Nations agencies
(UNHCR, UNICEF and UNDP) which have a good knowledge of the beneficiary
countries and play a crucial role in the development and implementation
of such projects.
5. The recently published Council of Europe Action Plan 2006-2015
for people with disabilities opens up a vast field of action for
member states, as the estimated proportion of persons with disabilities
– due to disease, accidents and disabling conditions among the elderly
– in Europe is between 10% and 15%, and that number is expected
to grow steadily as a result of increasing life expectancy and population
aging. Council of Europe member states should accordingly intensify
co-operation with the CEB and present more bankable projects aimed
at implementing this Action Plan at national level.
6. Further to the Action Plan adopted at the 3rd Council of Europe
Summit held in Warsaw on 16 and 17 May 2005, new activities aiming
at the training of magistrates, justice system managers, administrators,
civil servants and government officials, as well as support for
administrative and judicial public services, will widen the bank’s
scope of work. They can contribute to improving the functioning
of the justice systems in member states, facilitating cooperation
with the European Court of Human Rights and preventing repeated
violations of human rights. Countries like the Russian Federation,
Ukraine, Armenia and Azerbaijan could in particular gain from these
new activities, but first and foremost they need to join the bank.
The Assembly hopes that the CEB will soon be in a position to cofinance
the first projects in this domain.
7. The Assembly welcomes the CEB’s reinforced project evaluation
capacity through the creation of the Ex Post Evaluation Department,
thus enabling the bank to better assess its own performance, evaluate
the efforts of its partners, optimise its administrative capacities,
adjust operational management and draw lessons for more ambitious
and targeted action in the future. The CEB’s technical assistance,
including through interest rate subsidies and donations, and monitoring
throughout the project cycle could also be strengthened. To this end,
it seems necessary to increase the human resources of the bank.
8. As the CEB has no field presence in its member states, closer
contacts with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(EBRD) and the European Investment Bank (EIB), with a view to taking advantage
of their regional presence and expertise, could prove highly useful,
not least in the framework of bilateral co-operation agreements
and the co-financing of projects with these institutions, especially
in the CEB’s target countries.
9. In conclusion, the Assembly recommends that the Committee
of Ministers:
9.1 consider ways
of enhancing Council of Europe-CEB co-operation on identifying and
preparing projects in the target group of countries in central,
eastern and south-eastern Europe;
9.2 strongly encourage Council of Europe member states that
are not yet members of the CEB (Andorra, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan,
Monaco, Montenegro, the Russian Federation, Ukraine and the United
Kingdom) to join the bank at the earliest opportunity;.
9.3 urge the CEB’s member states to:
9.3.1 enhance co-operation with regional and local authorities
in order to raise their awareness of the CEB lending opportunities
and assist them in strengthening their project development capacity;
9.3.2 accelerate the identification and preparation of projects
for the benefit of vulnerable populations, including migrants, refugees
and displaced persons, with a view to presenting projects for CEB
financing;
9.3.3 accelerate the identification and preparation of projects
under national programmes for social cohesion and action plans for
people with disabilities, with a view to presenting projects for CEB
financing;
9.3.4 consider allocating additional resources for enhanced
CEB activity in eastern and southeastern Europe, especially as regards
project preparation, feasibility studies, technical assistance and
micro-loans, basing themselves on the example of the Norwegian Trust
Account;
9.3.5 support the strengthening of the CEB’s project evaluation
and follow-up capacities with an adequate increase in human resources;
9.3.6 strengthen the action of the CEB’s Auditing Board with
a view to supervising more closely the use of representational and
travel expenditure;
9.4 propose that the CEB:
9.4.1 select
a higher percentage of projects in the target group from among the
states which are not members of the European Union;
9.4.2 enhance project co-ordination with international financial
institutions and seek working synergies with the European Commission
(EU Neighbourhood Programme), the EBRD and the EIB in target countries;
9.4.3 pay increasing attention to the co-financing of projects
in non-European Union member states;
9.4.4 reinforce staff resources in order to strengthen the monitoring
of projects, including more frequent random on-site checks, especially
with regard to the indirect loan programmes;
9.4.5 consider publishing more information on its mission, projects
and operating principles, for the attention of the general public
in the languages of the target group of countries;
9.4.6 enhance technical assistance, where appropriate with the
Council of Europe, for project pre-feasibility, feasibility and
needs assessment studies in target countries and support measures for
projects approved in these countries in order to improve their fund
management and absorption capacity, and to accelerate project implementation;
9.4.7 gradually phase out indirect loans through intermediary
banks and, in the meantime, increase its control over the financing
conditions applied by the intermediaries to the final borrowers;
9.4.8 promote increased geographical diversification of its
staff, especially as regards senior management positions.