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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council & Ors, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills [2014] EWHC 232 (Admin) (07 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/232.html Cite as: [2014] BLGR 389, [2014] EWHC 232 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
The Court House, 1 Oxford Row, Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
The Queen (on the application of (1) Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council (2) Liverpool City Council and others) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Jonathan Swift QC and Mr James Cornwell (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28 - 29 January 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stewart:
The Claimants
• Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council
• Doncaster Borough Council
• Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council
• Sheffield City Council
The Merseyside Local Authorities within the Liverpool City Region are:
• Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council
• Liverpool City Council
• Sefton Metropolitan Borough Council
• St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council
• Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council
Glossary
LEP Local Enterprise Partnership
SCR Sheffield City Region
LCR Liverpool City Region
The Cohesion Policy The EU Economic, Social and Territorial Cohesion Policy
ERDF European Regional Development Fund
ESF European Social Fund
NUTS The EU Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics
TFEU Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union
The 2006 Regulation Council Regulation (EC) 1083/2006
The 2013 Regulation Regulation (EU) 1303/2013
CFR The Charter of Fundamental Rights
PSED Public Sector Equality Duty
The Issue for Determination
(i) The Defendant's allocation of the EU Structural Funds for the period 2014 2020 as between the four countries of the United Kingdom. This decision was announced on 26 March 2013.(ii) The Defendant's allocation of EU Structural Funds for the period 2014 2020 as between the English regions. This decision was announced on 27 June 2013.
(i) Martin Eyres. Mr Eyres' statements are dated 15 October 2013 and 15 January 2014. He is the head of European Affairs based in the office of the Chief Executive of Liverpool City Council. His evidence is filed on behalf of the Claimants.(ii) Doctor Susan Chui Chi Baxter. Her statements are dated 18 December 2013 and 22 January 2014. Dr. Baxter is Deputy Director EU Funding and Industrial Policy and is a senior civil servant within the Defendant's Ministry. Her statements are filed on behalf of the Defendant.
Legal Materials
(i) TFEU Articles 162 164, 174 178(ii) The 2006 Regulation Recital (17), Articles 3, 5, 6, 8(1), 8(2), 8(3) and 8(4), Annex II paragraphs 4, 6, 13 and 17.
(iii) The 2013 Regulation Recital (1), (3), (13), (14), (28) and (77); Articles 7, 9, 89, 90(1) and (2), 93 and Annex VII paragraph 2, para 15.
(iv) CFR Articles 21, 51(1).
(v) Equality Act 2010, section 149.
Broad EU Framework
Via these means the Cohesion Policy is sought to be implemented. The practical implementation has, since 2000, been effected through a seven year funding programme.
2000 2006 Programme
2007 2013 Programme
(i) Convergence regions. These were the most deprived/poorest regions. They had a GDP of less than 75% of the EU average (Article 5(1) of the 2006 Regulation). In the UK, Cornwall and West Wales were Convergence regions.(ii) Phasing-in regions. These were regions that had been Objective 1 regions, but whose GDP was no longer below 75% of the average of the 15 Member States comprising the EU in the year 2000. They were regions who were Phasing-in to Competitiveness and Employment. Merseyside and South Yorkshire were the only two UK Phasing-in regions. Under Article 8(2) of the Regulation they were " eligible, on a transitional and specific basis, for financing by the Structural Funds under the Regional Competitiveness and Employment Objective." The allocation of funds to the Phasing-in regions was governed by paragraph 6(b) of Annex II to the 2006 Regulation.
(iii) Phasing-out regions. These were also regions that had been Objective 1 regions. The difference between them and Phasing-in regions was that their GDP only exceeded the threshold for Convergence by reference to average GDP because of the statistical effects of the enlargement of the EU, by reason of admission of poorer central and Eastern European States as Member States. By reference to the average GDP of the 15 Member States as at 2000, Phasing-out regions would still have qualified as Convergence regions. In the UK, the Highlands and Islands was the only Phasing-out region. Article 8(1) of the 2006 Regulation provided for their (different) transitional and specific financing by the Structural Funds. Their allocation under the transitional support referred to in Article 8 was governed by paragraph 6(a) of Annex II to the 2006 Regulation.
(iv) Competitiveness regions. These comprised all other regions in the UK. They were relatively wealthy compared to regions in the other categories and had GDP levels around or above EU average.
2014 2020 Programme
"(a) Less Developed regions, whose GDP per capita is less than 75% of the average GDP of the EU 27;
(b) Transition regions, whose GDP per capita is between 75% and 90% of the average GDP of the EU 27;
(c) More Developed regions, whose GDP per capita is above 90% of the average GDP of the EU 27."
(Article 90)
(a) Two Less Developed regions (Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly, and West Wales and the Valleys).(b) 11 Transition regions. These are Northern Ireland, Highlands and Islands and 9 English regions, including South Yorkshire and Merseyside.
The First Decision: 26 March 2013
"
As a result of the new EU formula for allocating Structural Funds, agreed by the European Council in February, there would not have been a fair distribution across the UK, with each of the Devolved Administrations set to lose significant funding vital for economic growth.
In view of this the UK government has decided to reallocate EU Structural Funds to minimise the impact of sudden and significant cut backs in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.
. ..
The Government is providing:
- Northern Ireland with a total allocation of around 457 million, an uplift of 181 million compared to the amount that Northern Ireland would receive under the EU formula for allocation of the Funds to the UK.
- Scotland with total funding of around 795 million. This represents an uplift of 228 million compared to the amount that Scotland would receive under the EU formula for allocation of the Funds to the UK.
- Wales with total allocation of around 2.145 billion. This represents an uplift of 375 million compared to the amount that Wales would receive under the EU formula for allocation of the Funds to the UK.
- England with a total allocation of around 6.174 billion.
This decision means that each administration is only subject to an equal percentage cut of around 5% in funding compared to 2007 13 levels. The government believes that this delivers the fairest deal for England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales."
(i) 559 million to the Less Developed regions(ii) 1,628 million to the 9 Transition regions
(iii) 3,988 million to the More Developed regions.
The Second Decision: 27 June 2013
"
The Government has set allocations that deliver the fairest split of funding across England, as far as EU rules allow. Allocations by LEP area for ERDF and ESF are set out in the Annex .
The government has today also confirmed the detailed allocations for the Highlands and Islands region in Scotland as 172 million and the allocation for West Wales as 1.783 million and for East Wales as 361 million.
All allocations are subject to final agreement on the EU Regulations and the EU 2014 2020 budget in the European Parliament. The European Commission will also need to agree the UK Government's specific proposals."
Methodology for the Allocation of Funds for the 2014 2020 Period
(i) Records the (unchallenged) transfer of 3% of the budget for the More Developed regions and Transition regions to the Less Developed region paragraph 3.(ii) Records the fact that allocations for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland were then set, such that each administration's overall allocation was equalised at a 5% reduction in relation to their 2007 2013 allocation paragraph 4.
(iii) States:
"The 2007 2013 allocations took account of the greater development needs in the North and the Midlands compared to most of the South. The disparities have not lessened so the government decided that the UK's spending commitments scheduled against the EU budget for 2013 set the base line for the allocation of ESF ERDF for 2014 20. With regard to the area designations described at EU level this meant that:All "Transition" regions received an equal c.20% uplift based on those regions' 2013 spending commitments " paragraph 5.
(iv) Specifically deals with South Yorkshire and Merseyside in paragraphs 9 12 as follows:
"9. From 2014 2020 both South Yorkshire and Merseyside will be classified as Transition regions, reflecting their current economic position, along with nine other UK regions. As such they will receive a proportionate share of the UK's budget for Transition regions but they will not enjoy special status over and above other UK Transition regions.[5]10. As Phasing-in regions, South Yorkshire and Merseyside have been subject to a downward taper of Structured Funds spending commitments across 2007 13 in order to give time to adjust to lower levels of receipts.11. The spending commitments are not all spent in the year in which they are allocated as under the "n+3" rule, programmes have three years in which to spend these commitments. In terms of actual spending, the profile in 2007 13 is partly a function of the n+3 rule, and partly a function of the speed and profile of implementation by the responsible authorities. The same will also be true in 2014 20. However we must compare like with like. The announcement on allocations concerns spending commitments and the comparator must therefore be spending commitments in 2007 13. So it is true to say that these areas will see a 20% increase in their annual allocations in 2014 20 compared to a 2013 base line (or 15% once the 4.3% reserve of Funds by government is taken into account).12. Taking into account the 4.3% reserve of funds by government, this will mean that in 2013 South Yorkshire was allocated 20 million and in 2014 it will be allocated 23 million. Merseyside was allocated 23 million in 2013 and in 2014 it was allocated 26 million."
The 2013 Allocation Baseline
In the 2007 2013 period, the effect of Merseyside and South Yorkshire being categorised as Phasing-in regions meant that their allocation was determined pursuant to paragraph 6(b) of Annex II to the 2006 Regulations. In the first year of the period (2007), an allocation of 75% per capita of what had been paid in 2006 ensured that there would be no sudden drop in funding for regions which had previously been Objective 1 categorised. However there was then a linear reduction in 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011 such that, by 2011, Phasing-in regions received only the national average aid per capita for Competitiveness regions. The 2011, 2012 and 2013 allocation was therefore much lower than earlier, since the Competitiveness regions were the most prosperous and received the least aid. Thus the full funding for Merseyside and South Yorkshire (taken together) comprised of the following yearly percentages:
2007 31.37%
2008 25.04%
2009 18.45%
2010 11.58%
2011 4.43%
2012 4.52%
2013 4.61%
This funding profile was very different from that of a Competitiveness region which received a roughly equal amount of money during each year 2007 2013. Further, as paragraph 5 of the 2014 2020 methodology document shows, the government provided its own weightings and indicators of economic development in the 2007 2013 period, so as to direct higher levels of funding per capita to more deprived areas of the North of England which were nonetheless Competitiveness regions.
"6. The allocations under the transitional support referred to in Article 8 will result from the application of the following parameters:
.
(b) 75% of their individual 2006 per capita aid intensity level in 2007 and a linear reduction thereafter to reach the national average per capita aid intensity level for the Regional competitiveness and employment objective by 2011 "
(i) Phasing-in regions would, on the basis of their per capita GDP alone, have been classified as Competitiveness regions.(ii) Because a sudden jump to Competitiveness status would have resulted in a significant and sudden reduction in EU funding, the EU introduced the Phasing-in category.
(iii) This funding basis, by reason of the Phasing-in status, was well known in the regions. The North West Regional Development Agency published a summary and, in relation to Merseyside, said that it was "a "Phasing-in" region which allows the area to adjust gradually to the reduction in funding available." Similarly, the Yorkshire and Humber Regional Competitiveness and Employment Programme, Operational Programme 2007 2013 stated that South Yorkshire would "receive transitional support as a Phasing-in region that qualified for Objective 1 funding in 2000 2006 " and "because of its Phasing-in status South Yorkshire's profile is heavily weighted towards the first four years and tapers towards the end of the programming period the higher level of resources in South Yorkshire in the short term will not lend itself well to longer term support programmes but to one off capital projects, one off revenue funded support and building on the current Objective 1 programme."
(iv) Therefore it was to be expected that there would be a significant drop in funding in the 2014 2020 period because the transitional funding would no longer be provided.
(i) That the wording of Article 8(2) has this effect. In particular the last paragraph of Article 8(2) in relation to Cyprus says "Cyprus shall benefit in 2007 2013 from the transitional financing applicable to the regions referred to in the first sub-paragraph."[6](ii) On the Defendant's logic, Phasing-out regions which were covered by Article 8(1) would have lost their transitional support after 2012, yet Recital (17) says of Phasing-out regions they "are to benefit from substantial transitional aid This aid is to end in 2013 and is not to be followed by a further transitional period."
(iii) The Minister of State at the Defendant Department (Michael Fallon MP) said in the House of Commons on 1 July 2013, "As such, it is the current EU budget period 2007 2013 that is the transitional period for South Yorkshire, and the EU Funds have been on a declining taper for the entire seven year period, in order for partners in that area to adjust to a lower level of EU receipts."
(i) The purpose of "Phasing-in" and the tapering provisions of paragraph 6(b) seem to me to be clear. It was as the Defendant contends. This is specifically supported by the words in the sub paragraph "a linear reduction thereafter to reach the national average per capita aid intensity level for the regional competitive and employment objective by 2011". By this, the 2011 level was the cessation of the transition. Thereafter the funding level remained flat, as it had done throughout the period in the Competitiveness regions.[7](ii) The fact that there was transitional and specific financing in the 2007-2013 period does not mean that such transitional financing lasted throughout the duration of that period. In particular the opening words of paragraph 6(b) to Annex II refer to "transitional support". It is difficult to see how there could be "transitional support" after 2010, when a Phasing-out region received only the national average per capita aid intensity level for a Competitiveness region after that date.
(iii) The period as a whole (both for Phasing-in and Phasing-out regions) might possibly be described as "transitional", but the transitional support and funding ceased after 2010 for the Phasing-in regions.
(iv) The words of Ministers to Parliament should not be regarded as determinative of the construction of a legal document. That said, I find no problem with the Minister having described the period 2007 2013 as "the transitional period".
(i) This ignores the fact that the Claimants had received very substantially more than other Competitiveness regions in 2007 2010. Nine other Competitiveness regions are Transition regions under the 2014 2020 allocation and they did not benefit from additional funding.(ii) The Defendant does not accept the Claimants' hypothesis which gives rise to the argument that they would have received significantly more in 2011 2013 had they been Competitiveness regions. Dr Baxter accepts that, had they been Competitiveness regions, the methodology would have been different, but says in her first statement "it cannot be determined with any certainty what the allocations of those two regions would have been". She says in her second statement (paragraph 14) that it is just as likely that the methodology would have been adjusted to be less favourable to the Claimants. This is because Mr Eyres' calculations are based on some speculation by reference to other Competitiveness regions or other NUTS 1 regions which are not appropriate objects of comparison. Had the Claimants been Competitiveness regions, a number of other parameters of the 2007 2013 allocation would have been different. This gave rise to a substantial factual dispute. It was not possible for me clearly to get to the bottom of this. I consider I must proceed on the basis of Dr Baxter's evidence. Mr Swift Q.C. took specific instruction from Dr Baxter that the last sentence of paragraph 67 of her first statement meant that the 880.5 million in fact allocated to the Claimants (at 2004 prices) for 2007 2013 would not have increased the 5.33 billion budget for the Competitiveness regions had the Claimants been such in that period.[8]
(iii) The fundamental point here is that there was a logical and consistent thread in the Claimants being Phasing-in regions. The Secretary of State was in no way obliged, in my judgment, to carry out a retrospective hypothetical analysis.
(iv) The Defendant nevertheless carried out such an analysis as a result of receiving the Amended Grounds of Claim. The conclusions are that the North West NUTS 1 region might have seen an increase of 25 million and Yorkshire and Humberside NUTS 1 region an increase of 82 million. Dividing the increases up by NUTS 2 regions which would have been constituent parts of the NUTS 1 regions would have resulted in 2013 allocations for Merseyside increased by about 0.5 million and for South Yorkshire 2.2 million. This would have led to increased funding for 2014 2020. The knock-on effect of the higher baseline would have been a fall below the 15% increase in funding for the Transition regions as a whole. The guestimate is that the theoretical increase in funding for Merseyside and South Yorkshire would have been 5% and 15% respectively above those actually determined.
However these calculations were made by the Defendant on what Leading Counsel described as "contested and uncertain assumptions".[9] I do not feel I should place any reliance on these calculations. [10]
EU Notional "Allocations" to NUTS 2 Regions (2014 2020)
(i) The Commission made no allocation (whether notional or otherwise) to individual regions. As Dr Baxter makes clear in paragraph 10 of her second witness statement, this is a decision for the Member State. She goes further and says "The European Commission has indicated in meetings with government officials that these allocations (where Member States have been able to estimate what these would have been) should not be used to determine the actual allocations to NUTS 2 regions."(ii) The Commission has not disclosed to any Member State the notional "allocations" that are used, and has said that it does not intend to do so in the future.
(iii) The UK government has estimated what notional allocations the Commission might have used. They were not required to carry out such estimations.
(iv) In short, these estimations are of themselves of no relevance in determining the issues before me. However, I shall examine them further in relation to the specific Grounds of Claim.
The First Decision: Rationale
The Second Decision: Rationale
(i) Option A which was based on the EU Commission's methodology. This would have brought a significant uplift in funding to the South of England compared to the North.(ii) Option B based the allocations on 2007 2013 levels, relying for purposes of the calculations on the 2013 allocation.
(iii) Option C relied on 2007 2013 figures, but based South Yorkshire's and Merseyside's (along with all English Transition regions) allocations on their average allocation under the previous settlement. Dr Baxter says this would have resulted in a substantial cut to all Transition regions (including Merseyside and South Yorkshire) of 25% compared to 2007 2013, but significantly higher funding for Merseyside and South Yorkshire compared to 2013.
(iv) Option D was a hybrid option using the EU formula for Transition regions with a UK specific formula for More Developed regions. For the Transition regions however, this had the same effect as Option A.
(i) By equalising the changes from the previous period, followed the same approach as that taken to the allocations made to the four UK countries in the First Decision.(ii) Largely avoided significant shifts in funding between the 2007 2013 and 2014 2020 periods, thereby minimising the number of areas that would lose out from the new allocations.
(iii) Increased the funding for the North of England relative to the South compared to the EU formula for allocating funds to the UK. Ministers were of the opinion that there had been no fundamental change in the economic landscape to justify a significant shift in the allocations.
(i) Using the 2007 2013 average would result in all Transition regions receiving a 22% cut in funding compared to 2007 2013 (25% after the national "top slice" to cover core administration costs in England). This result was primarily because of the high baseline for South Yorkshire and Merseyside that would have resulted from taking into account average allocations for the 2007 2013 period. Such a reduction, imposed on the regions as a whole, would have been considerable, particularly as they were expecting to enjoy increased funding as a result of the production of the new Transition category of regions. This category had been specifically introduced to provide enhanced levels of funding for regions at an intermediate stage of development. Indeed Dr Baxter says that imposing across the board cuts of this nature would also have been likely to have created difficulties in agreeing the allocations with the European Commission.[14](ii) Merseyside and South Yorkshire were specifically considered. Although they would sustain a large drop in funding levels compared to the 2007 2013 average, they, and all other Transition regions, avoided large drops in funding levels as between 2013 and 2014. A key aspect of the Second Decision was the status of Merseyside and South Yorkshire as Phasing-in regions in the previous period. Ministers considered that basing allocations for the new period on the previous period's average would have unduly advantaged Merseyside and South Yorkshire in relation to the other English Transition regions, since the increased allocations in the period 2007 2010 were expressly intended to be "transitional and specific".[15]
(a) Phasing-out regions had been funded under the Convergence Objective in recognition of their greater challenges.(b) The rate of reduction in allocations in the 2007 2013 period was slower in the Phasing-out regions than the Phasing-in regions.
(c) Phasing-out status provided additional recognition in other ways such as a higher co-financing rate of 75%. The co-financing rate of the Phasing-in regions was 50%. [All the EU structural funds need to be co-financed or "matched" by domestic investments. In Highlands and Islands a 75% rate meant £3 of EU funding had to be matched with £1 domestic funds. In Merseyside and South Yorkshire £1 of EU funding had to be matched with £1 of domestic funding.]
Effects of the 2014 2020 Allocation: Analysis
This is factually accurate.[16] However the 61% figure is not a matter of legitimate complaint since the funds awarded to the Claimants during the previous period was not an appropriate baseline. See paragraphs 26 30 and paragraph 46 47 of this judgment.
This is based on a false premise. The EU Commission did not "award" any funding in respect of the individual NUTS 2 regions, that being a decision for the Member State. See paragraphs 30 35 of this judgment.
The answer to this is in effect the same as in paragraph 54.1 above. Further, using the 2013 baseline, all English Transition regions received a real terms increase in funding.
Transition region | % EU average GDP per capita | Allocations per capita 2014 20 |
Cumbria | 89.49% | 166 |
Devon | 88.18% | 67 |
East Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire | 85.81% | 158 |
Lancashire | 84.86% | 166 |
South Yorkshire | 84.46% | 123 |
Shropshire & Staffordshire | 83.91% | 167 |
Merseyside | 80.14% | 135 |
Lincolnshire | 79.79% | 137 |
Tees Valley & Durham | 78.52% | 280 |
If the challenge to the First Decision is unfounded then this point has no significance. In any event, the question is to what extent if at all the average EU GDP should have been used as the basis of 2014 2020 allocation. The fact that it was not used is clear from the fact that, even as between the Highlands and Islands and Northern Ireland, the average EU GDP being roughly comparable, results, nevertheless, in the Highlands and Islands receiving almost twice as much by way of per capita allocation, on the Claimants' figures.
Legal Principles
(i) Wherever a Member State acts within the scope of EU law, the general principles of EU law apply. They apply here because the Member State is implementing EU rules.[17](ii) Comparable situations must not, without justification, be treated differently and different situations must be treated alike. In the common law treating like cases alike and unlike cases differently is a general axiom of rational behaviour[18]. A decision will be irrational where it is based upon "an error of reasoning which robs the decision of logic".[19]
(iii) A decision must take into account all relevant considerations.
The Claimants rely heavily on the guidance in Bank Mellat v HM Treasury (No 2) [2013] 3WLR 179 at 229H 230D. Lord Sumption said as regards the objective justification of unequal treatment and the principle of proportionality:
" The requirements of rationality and proportionality, as applied to decisions engaging the human rights of applicants,[22] inevitably overlap the question depends on an exacting analysis of the factual case advanced in defence of the measure, in order to determine (i) whether its objective is sufficiently important to justify the limitation of a fundamental right; (ii) whether it is rationally connected to the objective; (iii) whether a less intrusive measure could have been used; and (iv) whether, having regard to these matters and to the severity of the consequences, a fair balance has been struck between the rights of the individual and the interests of the community. These four requirements are logically separate, but in practice they inevitably overlap because the same facts are likely to be relevant to more than one of them. "
Margin of Discretion
"Lord Neuberger MR has come to the same conclusion as I have, but, while there is much common ground, we have to some extent arrived there by a different route. Thus, where as I would, in the circumstances of this case, apply the same level of intensity to the decision of the Secretary of State as to that of Parliament relative to the issue of the compatibility of a ban on TVMs with Article 34 FEU, Lord Neuberger MR would apply a narrower margin of appreciation to the decision of the Secretary of State than to a Community institution or Parliament Lord Neuberger MR has derived considerable assistance from the judgment of Lord Bingham CJ in Ex p Eastside Cheese Co rather than directly from the jurisprudence of the Court of Justice on which Mr Paines relies. However, as Lord Neuberger observes at paragraph 196 of his judgment, Lord Bingham's judgment is based on the jurisprudence of the Court of Justice and it is not therefore surprising that we should both apply a low level of scrutiny. For my part, I have utilised the "manifestly inappropriate" test, rather than the margin of appreciation. I have preferred to use the terminology of the Court of Justice in order to avoid any suggestion of applying a lower test than that applied by the Court of Justice and so that my reasoning can be tracked into the Court's jurisprudence "
199. in Ex p Eastside Cheese Co [1999] 3CMLR 123, para 46 Lord Bingham CJ said:
"It is clear that the National Legislature has a considerable margin of appreciation, especially in legislating on matters which raise complex economic issues connected with the community's fundamental policies."
It is worth noting that this observation related to the Legislature, but it must also apply to the Executive, albeit with less force, in the light of what he had said at para 48.
200. The breadth of the margin of appreciation in relation to any decision thus depends on the circumstances of the case and, in particular, on the identity of the decision-maker, the nature of the decision, the reasons for the decision, and the effect of the decision. Further, because the extent of the breadth cannot be expressed in arithmetical terms, it is not easy to describe in words which have the same meaning to everybody, the precise test to be applied to determine whether, in a particular case, a decision is outside the margin. It is therefore unsurprising that in different judgments, the same expression is sometimes used to describe different things, and that sometimes different expressions are used to mean the same thing.
(i) Article 90 of 2013 Regulations sets out for the EU Commission the goal of the Structural Funds i.e. to "support the investment for growth and jobs" in all regions which are NUTS 2 regions. Article 90(2) then delineates the three categories of NUTS Level 2 regions. That said, the subsequent allocation decisions are left to the Government of Member States. The funds for the Transition regions are fixed.[28] Therefore any methodology which increased the funds to the Claimants would result in reduced funds to the other English Transition regions.(ii) As I have already made clear, there was no obligation on the UK Government to adopt the methodology used by the Commission when determining the three categories of region for the purpose of allocation of funds within those categories. Nor was there any specific legal standard imposed, in accordance with which the funds had to be allocated by the Defendant.
(iii) Therefore I accept the Defendant's submission that these decisions do involve political policy and macroeconomic judgment concerning the allocation of funding at the highest level. They were decisions that involved economic and policy judgment whereby the Government had to decide political policy and macroeconomic judgment concerning the choice between different potential methodologies of allocation. Overwhelmingly this was a political judgment for the Government and the court should be very loath to interfere with such a judgment. A wide margin of discretion is afforded to the Government in relation to such decisions; the court should only interfere if a very high threshold of unreasonableness is met.[29]
The First Decision: Rationality and Failure to Treat Like Cases Alike.
It is factually correct that in 2014 202 Highlands and Islands and Northern Ireland will receive a 5% cut on their 2077 2013 allocation based on 2011 prices. [Based on the figures originally advanced by the Defendant the percentage figures can be calculated as less than 5%.]
This is as a result of the First Decision. Using the EU average GDP per capita measure, those two Regions do much better than the other English Transition regions.
(i) This region did have a different status in 2007 2013, being a Phasing-out region. The Claimants were funded under the Competitiveness objective. Highlands and Islands was funded under the Convergence Objective; it did not qualify as a Convergence region only because of the EU enlargement from 15 to 25 states which lowered the level of average GDP. As a Phasing-out region there was a more gradual Transitional period (paragraph 6(a) of Annex II to the 2006 Regulation).(ii) It is correct that by 2013 the Highlands and Islands (as a Phasing-out region) received the national average allocation of a Competitiveness region, as did the Phasing-in regions. Therefore, if this basis had been the main reasoning for the decision, it would not have been sustainable. However, it was not the main reasoning.
The Second Decision: Rationality and Failure to Treat Like Cases Alike and Unlike Cases Differently.
(i) The Defendant did not base, and was not required to base, the 2014 2020 allocation on percentage EU average GDP per capita.(ii) All Transition regions will receive a 15% real term uplift in funding compared to the 2013 baseline.
(iii) The fact that the Claimants will experience greater cuts than other Transition regions compared to the average funding in 2007 2013 is irrelevant. Using that basis would have unduly advantaged the Claimants in relation to the other English Transition regions. The Defendant's decision to treat the Claimants and the other Transition regions the same in 2014 2020, despite the fact that their 2013 funding allocations had been arrived at via a different route, was in my judgment entirely justified. This is particularly so given (a) the wide margin of appreciation and (b) the fact that the court should be slow to interfere in such a political judgment. Further,
- It was an entirely proper decision to avoid entrenching the temporary situation of the Claimants' status as Phasing-in regions.
- It is not the case that the Claimants' 2013 funding was far below the levels of all comparators.
- The Defendant considered four allocation methodologies and also a methodology based on a basket of indicators and applying a safety net. The rationale for adopting Option B was entirely rational and justified.
(iv) Any single rule would work to the advantage of some and the disadvantage of others. The logic of the Claimants' case is that the Defendant could not adopt a single rule. In my judgment the Defendant was entitled to do so. The fact that hard cases result does not mean that a single criterion is impermissible. This is particularly the case given that the EU had identified Transition regions as a single category because they all fell within a broad single band of average EU GDP per capita. In this case a basket of indicators and safety net methodology were also considered, but the Defendant deemed this to be inappropriate for the reasons I have set out in paragraph 44 of this judgment. He was entitled to make that decision.
Lack of Proportionality
Failure to Take Account of Relevant Considerations
Failure to Comply with the PSED
"(a) Eliminate discrimination, harassment, victimisation and any other conduct that is prohibited by or under this Act;
(b) Advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it ".
(i) It would tend to be the consequences of decisions taken by the Claimants themselves which would have an impact on particular protected characteristics.(ii) The funds available for the Transition regions were fixed. The Defendant's decisions therefore affected regions which were all relatively socially disadvantaged, some more so disadvantaged than the Claimants. He says there is no contention or any evidence that the Claimants' distribution of those with protected characteristics are in any material sense different from other Transition regions.
Summary
TITLE XI
THE EUROPEAN SOCIAL FUND
Article 162
(ex Article 146 TEC)
In order to improve employment opportunities for workers in the internal market and to contribute thereby to raising the standard of living, a European Social Fund is hereby established in accordance with the provisions set out below; it shall aim to render the employment of workers easier and to increase their geographical and occupational mobility within the Union, and to facilitate their adaptation to industrial changes and to changes in production systems, in particular through vocational training and retraining.
Article 163
(ex Article 147 TEC)
The Fund shall be administered by the Commission.
The Commission shall be assisted in this task by a Committee presided over by a Member of the Commission and composed of representatives of governments, trade unions and employers' organisations.
Article 164
(ex Article 148 TEC)
The European Parliament and the Council, acting in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure and after consulting the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, shall adopt implementing regulations relating to the European Social Fund.
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TITLE XVIII
ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND TERRITORIAL COHESION
Article 174
(ex Article 158 TEC)
In order to promote its overall harmonious development, the Union shall develop and pursue its actions leading to the strengthening of its economic, social and territorial cohesion.
In particular, the Union shall aim at reducing disparities between the levels of development of the various regions and the backwardness of the least favoured regions.
Among the regions concerned, particular attention shall be paid to rural areas, areas affected by industrial transition, and regions which suffer from severe and permanent natural or demographic handicaps such as the northernmost regions with very low population density and island, cross- border and mountain regions.
Article 175
(ex Article 159 TEC)
Member States shall conduct their economic policies and shall coordinate them in such a way as, in addition, to attain the objectives set out in Article 174. The formulation and implementation of the Union's policies and actions and the implementation of the internal market shall take into account the objectives set out in Article 174 and shall contribute to their achievement. The Union shall also support the achievement of these objectives by the action it takes through the Structural Funds (European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee Fund, Guidance Section; European Social Fund; European Regional Development Fund), the European Investment Bank and the other existing Financial Instruments.
The Commission shall submit a report to the European Parliament, the Council, the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions every three years on the progress made towards achieving economic, social and territorial cohesion and on the manner in which the various means provided for in this Article have contributed to it. This report shall, if necessary, be accompanied by appropriate proposals.
If specific actions prove necessary outside the Funds and without prejudice to the measures decided upon within the framework of the other Union policies, such actions may be adopted by the Council acting in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure and after consulting the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions.
Article 176
(ex Article 160 TEC)
The European Regional Development Fund is intended to help to redress the main regional imbalances in the Union through participation in the development and structural adjustment of regions whose development is lagging behind and in the conversion of declining industrial regions.
Article 177
(ex Article 161 TEC)
Without prejudice to Article 178, the European Parliament and the Council, acting by means of regulations in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure and consulting the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, shall define the tasks, priority objectives and the organisation of the Structural Funds, which may involve grouping the Funds. The general rules applicable to them and the provisions necessary to ensure their effectiveness and the coordination of the Funds with one another and with the other existing Financial Instruments shall also be defined by the same procedure.
A Cohesion Fund set up in accordance with the same procedure shall provide a financial contribution to projects in the fields of environment and trans-European networks in the area of transport infrastructure.
Article 178
(ex Article 162 TEC)
Implementing regulations relating to the European Regional Development Fund shall be taken by the European Parliament and the Council, acting in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure and after consulting the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions.
With regard to the European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee Fund, Guidance Section, and the European Social Fund, Articles 43 and 164 respectively shall continue to apply.
Council Regulation (EC) No 1083/2006 of 11 July 2006 laying down general provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund and the Cohesion Fund and repealing Regulation (EC) No 1260/1999
..
Whereas:
(17) A Convergence objective is to cover the Member States and regions whose development is lagging behind. The regions targeted by the Convergence objective are those whose per capita gross domestic product (GDP) measured in purchasing power parities is less than 75 % of the Community average. The regions suffering from the statistical effect linked to the reduction in the Community average following the enlargement of the European Union are to benefit for that reason from substantial transitional aid in order to complete their convergence process. This aid is to end in 2013 and is not to be followed by a further transitional period. The Member States targeted by the Convergence objective whose per capita gross national income (GNI) is less than 90 % of the Community average are to benefit under the Cohesion Fund.
.
Article 3
Objectives
1. The action taken by the Community under Article 158 of the Treaty shall be designed to strengthen the economic and social cohesion of the enlarged European Union in order to promote the harmonious, balanced and sustainable development of the Community. This action shall be taken with the aid of the Funds, the European Investment Bank (EIB) and other existing financial instruments. It shall be aimed at reducing the economic, social and territorial disparities which have arisen particularly in countries and regions whose development is lagging behind and in connection with economic and social restructuring and the ageing of the population.
The action taken under the Funds shall incorporate, at national and regional level, the Community's priorities in favour of sustainable development by strengthening growth, competitiveness, employment and social inclusion and by protecting and improving the quality of the environment.
2. To that end, the ERDF, the ESF, the Cohesion Fund, the EIB and the other existing Community financial instruments shall each contribute in an appropriate way towards achieving the following three objectives:
(a) the Convergence objective, which shall be aimed at speeding up the convergence of the least-developed Member States and regions by improving conditions for growth and employment through the increasing and improvement of the quality of investment in physical and human capital, the development of innovation and of the knowledge society, adaptability to economic and social changes, the protection and improvement of the environment, and administrative efficiency. This objective shall constitute the priority of the Funds;
(b) the Regional competitiveness and employment objective, which shall, outside the least-developed regions, be aimed at strengthening regions' competitiveness and attractiveness as well as employment by anticipating economic and social changes, including those linked to the opening of trade, through the increasing and improvement of the quality of investment in human capital, innovation and the promotion of the knowledge society, entrepreneurship, the protection and improvement of the environment, and the improvement of accessibility, adaptability of workers and businesses as well as the development of inclusive job markets; and
(c) the European territorial cooperation objective, which shall be aimed at strengthening cross-border cooperation through joint local and regional initiatives, strengthening transnational cooperation by means of actions conducive to integrated territorial development linked to the Community priorities, and strengthening interregional cooperation and exchange of experience at the appropriate territorial level.
3. Under the three objectives referred to in paragraph 2, assistance from the Funds shall, according to their nature, take into account specific economic and social features, on the one hand, and specific territorial features, on the other. The assistance shall, in an appropriate manner, support sustainable urban development particularly as part of regional development and the renewal of rural areas and of areas dependent on fisheries through economic diversification. The assistance shall also support areas affected by geographical or natural handicaps which aggravate the problems of development, particularly in the outermost regions as referred to in Article 299(2) of the Treaty as well as the northern areas with very low population density, certain islands and island Member States, and mountainous areas.
Chapter III
Geographical eligibility
Article 5
Convergence
1. The regions eligible for funding from the Structural Funds under the Convergence objective shall be regions corresponding to level 2 of the common classification of territorial units for statistics (hereinafter NUTS level 2) within the meaning of Regulation (EC) No 1059/2003 whose gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, measured in purchasing power parities and calculated on the basis of Community figures for the period 2000 to 2002, is less than 75 % of the average GDP of the EU-25 for the same reference period.
2. The Member States eligible for funding from the Cohesion Fund shall be those whose gross national income (GNI) per capita, measured in purchasing power parities and calculated on the basis of Community figures for the period 2001 to 2003, is less than 90 % of the average GNI of the EU-25 and which have a programme for meeting the economic convergence conditions referred to in Article 104 of the Treaty.
3. Immediately following the entry into force of this Regulation, the Commission shall adopt the list of regions fulfilling the criteria under paragraph 1 and of Member States fulfilling the criteria under paragraph 2. This list shall be valid from 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2013.
The eligibility of Member States for the Cohesion Fund shall be reviewed in 2010 on the basis of Community GNI figures for the EU-25.
Article 6
Regional competitiveness and employment
The regions eligible for funding from the Structural Funds under the Regional competitiveness and employment objective shall be those not covered by Article 5(1) and Article 8(1) and (2).
When presenting the national strategic reference framework referred to in Article 27, each Member State concerned shall indicate the NUTS level 1 or NUTS level 2 regions for which it will present a programme for financing by the ERDF.
..
Article 8
Transitional support
1. The NUTS level 2 regions which would have been eligible for Convergence objective status under Article 5(1) had the eligibility threshold remained at 75 % of the average GDP of the EU-15, but which lose eligibility because their nominal GDP per capita level will exceed 75 % of the average GDP of the EU-25, measured and calculated according to Article 5(1), shall be eligible, on a transitional and specific basis, for financing by the Structural Funds under the Convergence objective.
2. The NUTS level 2 regions totally covered by Objective 1 in 2006 under Article 3 of Regulation (EC) No 1260/1999 whose nominal GDP level per capita, measured and calculated according to Article 5(1), will exceed 75 % of the average GDP of the EU15 shall be eligible, on a transitional and specific basis, for financing by the Structural Funds under the Regional competitiveness and employment objective.
3. The Member States eligible for funding from the Cohesion Fund in 2006 which would have continued to be eligible had the eligibility threshold remained at 90 % of the average GNI of the EU-15, but which lose eligibility because their nominal per capita GNI will exceed 90 % of the average GNI of the EU-25 measured and calculated according to Article 5(2), shall be eligible, on a transitional and specific basis, for financing by the Cohesion Fund under the Convergence objective.
4. Immediately following the entry into force of this Regulation, the Commission shall adopt the list of regions fulfilling the criteria under paragraphs 1 and 2 and of Member States fulfilling the criteria under paragraph 3. This list shall be valid from 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2013.
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ANNEX II
Financial framework Criteria and methodology referred to in Article 18
Allocation method for the regions eligible under the Convergence objective referred to in Article 5(1)
..
Allocation method for the Member States and regions eligible under the Regional competitiveness and employment objective referred to in Article 6
4. The share of each Member State concerned is the sum of the shares of its eligible regions, which are determined on the basis of the following criteria, weighted as indicated: total population (weighting 0,5), number of unemployed people in NUTS level 3 regions with an unemployment rate above the group average (weighting 0,2), number of jobs needed to reach an employment rate of 70 % (weighting 0,15), number of employed people with a low educational level (weighting 0,10), and low population density (weighting 0,05). The shares are then adjusted according to relative regional prosperity (for each region, increase or decrease of its total share by + 5 %/-5 % according to whether its GDP per capita is below or above the average GDP per capita for the group). The share of each Member State will not however be less than three-quarters of its share in 2006 of combined funding under Objectives 2 and 3
.
Allocation method for the Member States and regions eligible for the transitional support referred to in Article 8
6. The allocations under the transitional support referred to in Article 8 will result from the application of the following parameters:
(a) for the regions defined in Article 8(1), 80 % of their individual 2006 per capita aid intensity level in 2007 and a linear reduction thereafter to reach the national average per capita aid intensity level for the Regional competitiveness and employment objective in 2013. To the allocation thus obtained is added, if applicable, an amount resulting from the allocation of a premium of EUR 600 per unemployed person, applied to the number of persons unemployed in that region exceeding the number that would be unemployed if the average unemployment rate of all the EU convergence regions applied.
(b) for the regions defined in Article 8(2), 75 % of their individual 2006 per capita aid intensity level in 2007 and a linear reduction thereafter to reach the national average per capita aid intensity level for the Regional competitiveness and employment objective by 2011.
(c) for the Member States defined in Article 8(3), the allocation will be degressive over seven years, with the amount in 2007 being EUR 1,2 billion, in 2008 EUR 850 million, in 2009 EUR 500 million, in 2010 EUR 250 million, in 2011 EUR 200 million, in 2012 EUR 150 million and in 2013 EUR 100 million.
..
13. As far as the transitional arrangements under paragraphs 6(a) and (b) are concerned, the starting point in 2007 for those regions which were not eligible for Objective 1 status in the 2000 to 2006 period, or whose eligibility started in 2004, will be 90 % of their theoretical 2006 per capita aid intensity level calculated on the basis of the 1999 Berlin allocation method with their regional GDP per capita level being assimilated to 75 % of the EU 15 average.
..
17. Cyprus will benefit in 2007 to 2013 from the transitional arrangements applicable to the regions defined in paragraph 6(b), its starting point in 2007 being established in accordance with paragraph 13.
EU: Regulation (EU) No 1303/?2013
Celex No. 313R1303
Regulation (EU) No 1303/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 December 2013 laying down common provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the Cohesion Fund, the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development and the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund and laying down general provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the Cohesion Fund and the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund and repealing Council Regulation (EC) No 1083/2006
.
Whereas:
(1) Article 174 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) provides that, in order to strengthen its economic, social and territorial cohesion, the Union is to aim at reducing disparities between the levels of development of the various regions and the backwardness of the least favoured regions or islands, and that particular attention is to be paid to rural areas, areas affected by industrial transition, and regions which suffer from severe and permanent natural or demographic handicaps. Article 175 TFEU requires that the Union is to support the achievement of these objectives by the action it takes through the European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee Fund, Guidance Section, the European Social Fund, the European Regional Development Fund, the European Investment Bank and other instruments.
..
(3) In line with the conclusions of the European Council of 17 June 2010, whereby the Union strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth was adopted, the Union and Member States should implement the delivery of smart, sustainable and inclusive growth, while promoting harmonious development of the Union and reducing regional disparities. The ESI Funds should play a significant role in the achievement of the objectives of the Union strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth.
(13) In the context of its effort to increase economic, territorial and social cohesion, the Union should, at all stages of implementation of the ESI Funds, aim at eliminating inequalities and at promoting equality between men and women and integrating the gender perspective, as well as at combating discrimination based on sex, racial or ethnic origin, religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation as set out in Article 2 of the Treaty on the European Union (TEU), Article 10 TFEU and Article 21 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, taking into account in particular accessibility for persons with disabilities, as well as Article 5(2) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights stating that no one is to be required to perform forced or compulsory labour.
(14) The objectives of the ESI Funds should be pursued in the framework of sustainable development and the Union's promotion of the aim of preserving, protecting and improving the quality of the environment as set out in Articles 11 and 191(1) TFEU, taking into account the polluter pays principle. To this end, the Member States should provide information on the support for climate change objectives, in line with the ambition to devote at least 20 % of the budget of the Union to those objectives, using a methodology based on the categories of intervention, focus areas or measures adopted by the Commission by means of an implementing act reflecting the principle of proportionality.
(28) With a view to ensuring consistency between programmes supported under different ESI Funds, particularly in the context of ensuring a contribution to the Union strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth, it is necessary to set out common minimum requirements as regards the content of the programmes, which may be complemented by Fund-specific rules to take into account the specific nature of each ESI Fund.
.
(77) In order to promote the TFEU objectives of economic, social and territorial cohesion, the Investment for growth and jobs goal should support all regions. To provide balanced and gradual support and reflect the level of economic and social development, resources under that goal should be allocated from the ERDF and the ESF among the less developed regions, the transition regions and the more developed regions according to their GDP per capita in relation to the EU-27 average. In order to ensure the long-term sustainability of investment from the Structural Funds, to consolidate the development achieved and to encourage the economic growth and social cohesion of the Union's regions, regions whose GDP per capita for the 2007- 2013 programming period was less than 75 % of the average of the EU-25 for the reference period but whose GDP per capita has grown to more than 75 % of the EU-27 average should receive at least 60 % of their indicative average annual 2007-2013 allocation. The total allocation from the ERDF, the ESF and the Cohesion Fund for a Member State should be at least 55 % of its individual 2007-2013 total allocation. Member States whose per capita gross national income (GNI) is less than 90 % of that of the Union average should benefit under the Investment for growth and jobs goal from the Cohesion Fund.
..
TITLE I
PRINCIPLES OF UNION SUPPORT FOR THE ESI FUNDS
..
Article 7
Promotion of equality between men and women and non-discrimination
The Member States and the Commission shall ensure that equality between men and women and the integration of gender perspective are taken into account and promoted throughout the preparation and implementation of programmes, including in relation to monitoring, reporting and evaluation.
The Member States and the Commission shall take appropriate steps to prevent any discrimination based on sex, racial or ethnic origin, religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation during the preparation and implementation of programmes. In particular, accessibility for persons with disabilities shall be taken into account throughout the preparation and implementation of programmes.
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TITLE II
STRATEGIC APPROACH
CHAPTER I
Thematic objectives for the ESI Funds and Common Strategic Framework
Article 9
Thematic objectives
In order to contribute to the Union strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth as well as the Fund-specific missions pursuant to their Treaty-based objectives, including economic, social and territorial cohesion, each ESI Fund shall support the following thematic objectives:
(1) strengthening research, technological development and innovation;
(2) enhancing access to, and use and quality of, ICT;
(3) enhancing the competitiveness of SMEs, of the agricultural sector (for the EAFRD) and of the fishery and aquaculture sector (for the EMFF);
(4) supporting the shift towards a low-carbon economy in all sectors;
(5) promoting climate change adaptation, risk prevention and management;
(6) preserving and protecting the environment and promoting resource efficiency;
(7) promoting sustainable transport and removing bottlenecks in key network infrastructures;
(8) promoting sustainable and quality employment and supporting labour mobility;
(9) promoting social inclusion, combating poverty and any discrimination;
(10) investing in education, training and vocational training for skills and lifelong learning;
(11) enhancing institutional capacity of public authorities and stakeholders and efficient public administration.
Thematic objectives shall be translated into priorities that are specific to each of the ESI Funds and are set out in the Fund-specific rules.
PART THREE
GENERAL PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO THE ERDF, THE ESF AND THE COHESION FUND
TITLE I
OBJECTIVES AND FINANCIAL FRAMEWORK
CHAPTER I
Mission, goals and geographical coverage of support
Article 89
Mission and Goals
1. The Funds shall contribute to developing and pursuing the actions of the Union leading to strengthening of its economic, social and territorial cohesion in accordance with Article 174 TFEU.
The actions supported by the Funds shall also contribute to the delivery of the Union strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth.
2. For the purpose of the mission referred to in paragraph 1, the following goals shall be pursued:
(a) Investment for growth and jobs in Member States and regions, to be supported by the Funds; and
(b) European territorial cooperation, to be supported by the ERDF.
Article 90
Investment for growth and jobs goal
1. The Structural Funds shall support the Investment for growth and jobs goal in all regions corresponding to level 2 of the common classification of territorial units for statistics ('NUTS level 2 regions') established by Regulation (EC) No 1059/2003 amended by Regulation (EC) No 105/2007.
2. Resources for the Investment for growth and jobs goal shall be allocated among the following three categories of NUTS level 2 regions:
(a) less developed regions, whose GDP per capita is less than 75 % of the average GDP of the EU-27;
(b) transition regions, whose GDP per capita is between 75 % and 90 % of the average GDP of the EU-27;
(c) more developed regions, whose GDP per capita is above 90 % of the average GDP of the EU-27.
The classification of regions under one of the three categories of regions shall be determined on the basis of how the GDP per capita of each region, measured in purchasing power parities (PPS) and calculated on the basis of Union figures for the period 2007 - 2009, relates to the average GDP of the EU-27 for the same reference period.
..
ANNEX VII
ALLOCATION METHODOLOGY
Allocation method for the less developed regions eligible under the Investment for growth and jobs goal, referred to in point (a) of the first subparagraph of Article 90(2)
Allocation method for transition regions eligible under the Investment for growth and jobs goal, referred to in point (b) of the first subparagraph of Article 90(2)
2. Each Member State's allocation shall be the sum of the allocations for its individual eligible NUTS level 2 regions, calculated in accordance with the following steps:
(a) determination of the minimum and maximum theoretical aid intensity for each eligible transition region. The minimum level of support is determined by the average per capita aid intensity per Member State before the application of the regional safety net, allocated to the more developed regions of that Member State. If the Member State has no more developed regions, the minimum level of support will correspond to the initial average per capita aid intensity of all more developed regions, i.e. EUR 19,80 per head and per year. The maximum level of support refers to a theoretical region with a GDP per head of 75 % of the EU-27 average and is calculated using the method defined in points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1. Of the amount obtained by this method, 40 % is taken into account;
(b) calculation of initial regional allocations, taking into account regional GDP per capita (in PPS) through a linear interpolation of the region's relative GDP per capita compared to EU-27;
(c) to the amount obtained in accordance with point (b) is added, if applicable, an amount resulting from the allocation of a premium of EUR 1 100 per unemployed person per year, applied to the number of persons unemployed in that region exceeding the number that would be unemployed if the average unemployment rate of all the less developed regions applied.
15. No transition region shall receive less than what it would have received if it had been a more developed region. In order to determine the level of this minimum allocation, the allocation distribution method for more developed regions will be applied to all regions having a GDP per capita of at least 75 % of the EU-27 average
.
CHARTER OF FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS OF THE EUROPEAN UNION
(2007/C 303/01)
TITLE III
EQUALITY
.
Article 21
Non-discrimination
1. Any discrimination based on any ground such as sex, race, colour, ethnic or social origin, genetic features, language, religion or belief, political or any other opinion, membership of a national minority, property, birth, disability, age or sexual orientation shall be prohibited.
TITLE VII
GENERAL PROVISIONS GOVERNING THE INTERPRETATION AND APPLICATION OF THE CHARTER
Article 51
Field of application
1. The provisions of this Charter are addressed to the institutions, bodies, offices and agencies of the Union with due regard for the principle of subsidiarity and to the Member States only when they are implementing Union law. They shall therefore respect the rights, observe the principles and promote the application thereof in accordance with their respective powers and respecting the limits of the powers of the Union as conferred on it in the Treaties.
Equality Act 2010
Part 11
E+W+SAdvancement of equality
Chapter 1
E+W+SPublic sector equality duty
149 Public sector equality duty
E+W+S
(1) A public authority must, in the exercise of its functions, have due regard to the need to
(a) eliminate discrimination, harassment, victimisation and any other conduct that is prohibited by or under this Act;
(b) advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it;
(c) foster good relations between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it.
(2) A person who is not a public authority but who exercises public functions must, in the exercise of those functions, have due regard to the matters mentioned in subsection (1).
(3) Having due regard to the need to advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it involves having due regard, in particular, to the need to
(a) remove or minimise disadvantages suffered by persons who share a relevant protected characteristic that are connected to that characteristic;
(b) take steps to meet the needs of persons who share a relevant protected characteristic that are different from the needs of persons who do not share it;
(c) encourage persons who share a relevant protected characteristic to participate in public life or in any other activity in which participation by such persons is disproportionately low.
(4) The steps involved in meeting the needs of disabled persons that are different from the needs of persons who are not disabled include, in particular, steps to take account of disabled persons' disabilities.
(5) Having due regard to the need to foster good relations between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it involves having due regard, in particular, to the need to
(a) tackle prejudice, and
(b) promote understanding.
(6) Compliance with the duties in this section may involve treating some persons more favourably than others; but that is not to be taken as permitting conduct that would otherwise be prohibited by or under this Act.
(7) The relevant protected characteristics are
- age;
- disability;
- gender reassignment;
- pregnancy and maternity;
- race;
- religion or belief;
- sex;
- sexual orientation.
(8) A reference to conduct that is prohibited by or under this Act includes a reference to
(a)a breach of an equality clause or rule;
(b)a breach of a non-discrimination rule.
(9) Schedule 18 (exceptions) has effect.
Note 1 These Local Enterprise Partnerships correspond approximately, but not exactly, to the Counties of South Yorkshire and Merseyside. [Back] Note 2 The Defendant reallocated 3% from each of the Transition and More Developed categories to the Less Developed category. The Claimants do not challenge this decision. [Back] Note 3 The Annex, i.e. the LEP Allocation Table produced by the Minister, totals 6.54 billion, not 6.2 billion. The announcement was at 2011 prices but the allocation was at 2013 prices. The footnote to the Table that Figures are nominal and so not adjusted for inflation was a (related) error. [Back] Note 4 Lack of consultation is not a separate ground of challenge. The Claimants merely submit that the Defendant may not have made the decisions which they allege are unlawful, had he consulted; also that it was a factor serving to narrow the discretion. I do not accept the latter point. [Back] Note 5 The Defendant says that the reference to UK (the second and third time) in para 9, but not the first time was an error. It should have said England and English. [Back] Note 6 Cyprus was a particular case because it had only acceded the EU in 2003. The Claimants also submit that the wording of Article 8(3) supports their submission. See also Annex II paragraph 17. [Back] Note 7 Note the different wording in Paragraph 6(a) re Phasing-out regions and Recital (17) which deals with the Convergence Objective and says: This aid is to end in 2013
. [Back] Note 8 This is just the type of factual dispute which was not clearly right/wrong and so is not capable of being subjected to the judicial process. See the Sinclair Collis case at paras 141 and 205. [Back] Note 9 See also Dr Baxters 2nd statement para 14. [Back] Note 10 The Claimants criticise the Defendants calculations as being based on 2011 prices and not on what a region would have actually received in 2013. They said that this was in order to present the lowest possible figures. I reject this complaint. Dr Baxter (second statement paragraph 8) makes it clear that the negotiation of the 2014 2020 EU budget was conducted entirely in 2011 prices and therefore the Defendant Ministrys calculations were undertaken in 2011 prices. In order to provide clarity on actual cash amounts available, the Government presented the allocations to the LEPs in their individual allocation letters in current prices. [Back] Note 11 The 11 UK Transition regions comprised nine English Regions, Northern Ireland and Highlands and Islands. [Back] Note 12 These reductions were exacerbated by the governments decision to transfer 3% of the More Developed and Transition regions budget to the two Less Developed regions and the governments first decision in relation to the four UK nations. [Back] Note 13 See footnote number 8 above. [Back] Note 14 The Defendant states that South Yorkshire and Merseyside regions received between them 1.01 billion in the 2007 2013 period (2011 prices). The total ring fenced funds for all eleven UK Transitional regions for 2014 2020 was 2.32 billion. Had South Yorkshire and Merseyside received in 2014 2020 [an allocation similar to that in the previous period] then these two regions would have been allocated something between ? and ½ of all the UKs Structural Funding for the eleven Transitional regions. [Back] Note 15 The Claimants do not submit that they should have received funding based on the 2007 2013 average. Nor do they offer any submission to the court as to the specific amounts that they say they should have been allocated. Their case is that the present decision was legally flawed and should be reconsidered by the Secretary of State. [Back] Note 16 The Defendants figure was 65%. See para 48 of this judgment. The difference was not explored. It may be explained by the use of 2011 and 2013 figures. The difference is, however, irrelevant to my decision. [Back] Note 17 E.g. C 442/00 Rodrigues Caballero [2002] ECR I11915, paragraphs 30 32. [Back] Note 18 Matadeen v Pointu [1999] 1AC 98, 109 C D. [Back] Note 19 Sedley J in R v Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration ex parte Balchin [1998] 1PLR 1. In Council for the Civil Service Unions v Minister for the Civil Service [1985] AC 374 at 410G H Lord Diplock said of irrationality: It applies to a decision which is so outrageous in its defiance of logic or of accepted moral standards that no sensible person who had applied his mind to the question to be decided could have arrived at it. [Back] Note 20 My ruling on Article 21 does not really affect the outcome since the Claimants accept that if they do not succeed on the general principle of equality, Article 21 will not assist them further. [Back] Note 21 See also AM (Somalia) v Entry Clearance Officer [2009] EWCA Civ 634 paragraphs 44, 50 51; R (MA and others) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2013] EWHC 2213 (QB) paragraph 38. [Back] Note 22 My underlining. [Back] Note 23 See also the Sinclair Collis case para 18 and the Caballero case paras 5, 7, 28, 35 37. [Back] Note 24 See for example TFEU Article 174, the 2013 Regulation Recital (1), (3), (77), Article 9(9), Article 89. [Back] Note 25 There is no suggestion here that there is any breach by the Defendants of Article 93. [Back] Note 26 As a separate point it is to be noted that, apart from the aim of reduction of regional disparity, there are many other aims contained in Regulation 13: see for example Recitals (3), (14), (28) and Articles 9 and 89. [Back] Note 27 That the issue was the saving of costs in OBrien is also clear from paras 43, 47, 63 65, 67, 69 and 74 of the judgment. [Back] Note 28 The fact that the funds are fixed does not, in my judgment, have any influence on the margin of discretion. [Back] Note 29 cf R v Secretary of State for the Environment ex parte London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham [1991] 1AC 521 at 597 E G; Lord Bridge. [Back] Note 30 As between Northern Ireland and Highlands and Islands, using the EU average GDP capita measure, Highlands and Islands fared very substantially better than Northern Ireland. [Back] Note 31 The fact that different measures yield different results demonstrates the need for the Defendant to have a wide margin of appreciation in these policy areas. [Back] Note 32 See paragraph 31 of this judgment. [Back] Note 33 Even if the Defendants had been under a duty to consider the latter, it would, for the reasons already given in this judgment, have not assisted the Claimants. [Back] Note 34 Baker and others v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2008] EWCA Civ 141, [2009] PTSR 809 at paragraph 31. [Back] Note 35 See in particular paragraphs 8 and 9 of the Fawcett Society case; paragraph 50 of the JG case. [Back] Note 36 R (Brown) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2009] PTSR 1506, [2008] EWHC 3158 (Admin) at paragraphs 90 96. [Back]