Council Regulation (EEC) No 4254/88 of 19 December 1988 laying down provisions for implementing Regulation (EEC) No 2052/88 as regards the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).
Council Regulation (EEC) No 4255/88 of 19 December 1988 laying down provisions for implementing (EEC) No 2052/88 as regards the European Social Fund (ESF).
Council Regulation (EEC) No 4256/88 of 19 December 1988 laying down provisions for implementing Regulation (EEC) No 2052/88 as regards the European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee Fund (EAGGF), Guidance Section.
Le 2 mai 1997, le quotidien allemand Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung illustre les vifs débats au sein de la Commission européenne sur la question des fonds structurels européens.
On 17 September 1998, Pierre Moscovici, French Minister for European Affairs, replies to a written question tabled in the Senate on the reform of the Community Structural Funds.
On 11 February 1999, during the second national consultation on the reform of the Structural Funds, Pierre Moscovici, French Minister for European Affairs, outlines the state of negotiations on the objectives of the European Structural Funds.
In February 1999, Eneko Landaburu Illarramendi, Director-General of the European Commission’s DG XVI for Regional Policy and Cohesion, comments on the provisions in Agenda 2000 and highlights the issues surrounding European economic and social cohesion policy.
On 30 March 1999, following the Berlin European Council, the French daily newspaper Le Figaro considers the issues involved in the allocation of the European Structural Funds and takes a closer look at the case of Spain.
‘Sorry, Sir, but all those with the Cohesion Fund must sit up in the pigeon loft.’ Spanish cartoonists Ventura and El Burladero take an ironic look at Spain’s status as a net beneficiary compared to that of Germany, France and the United Kingdom.
On 11 December 1998, the French daily newspaper Le Monde outlines the issues involved in the reform of the European Structural Funds and considers the difficulty of establishing a new allocation scheme for aid to the most disadvantaged regions of the European Union.
On 21 June 1999, the Council of the European Union adopts a horizontal regulation which sets out the tasks, priority goals and organisation of the four Structural Funds, the rules applicable to them and the provisions necessary to ensure their effectiveness and the coordination between the Funds themselves and with the various other financial instruments.
On 26 October 1999, the French daily newspaper Le Monde analyses the objectives of and the conditions for granting aid from the three European Structural Funds: the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), the European Social Fund (ESF) and the European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee Fund (EAGGF).
On 6 June 2002, Danuta Hübner, Polish Secretary of State for European Integration, publishes an article in the German daily newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in which she analyses the importance of the European Structural Funds for the European Union applicant countries and looks into the way in which they are financed.
In December 2002, the French Government drafts a memorandum in which it proposes a reform of the economic and social cohesion policy in an enlarged European Union on the basis of three general principles.
On 23 June 2004, in a meeting chaired by Anne Anderson, Permanent Representative of Ireland to the European Union, Jacques Barrot, European Commissioner for Regional Policy, Stavros Dimas, European Commissioner for Employment and Social Affairs, Franz Fischler, European Commissioner for Agriculture, Rural Development and Fisheries, Péter Bálazs, Shadow European Commissioner to Jacques Barrot, and Sandra Kalniete, Shadow European Commissioner to Franz Fischler, endorse development programmes implemented in support of the 10 new Member States of the European Union under ‘The Structural Funds 2004–2006’ together with the Permanent Representatives of Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia.