This study for the REGI Committee of European Parliament assesses the main implications of the European Commission’s 2028-2034 proposals for the future design and implementation of Cohesion Policy, from the perspective of the European Parliament.
It examines the likely effects of the proposed new framework on simplification, flexibility, territorial and thematic concentrations, and Interreg, while paying particular attention to legislative, institutional and implementation issues likely to matter during the negotiations.
It finds that while the reforms may streamline the system at EU level and provide some gains, they also risk reducing predictability, weakening territorial targeting, increasing implementation burdens, and centralising decision-making.
It proposes recommendations to inform the European Parliament’s position on the reform.
The study has been authored by Carlos MENDEZ, John BACHTLER, Odilia VAN DER VALK, and Irene McMASTER of the European Policies Research Centre (EPRC).
Key findings:
- Simplification and performance-based delivery
The Commission presents the post-2027 framework as a major simplification, based on fewer programming documents, a single rulebook, stronger performance-based delivery and wider use of simplified cost options and financing not linked to costs. The study finds that these changes may simplify the system at EU level, but they are unlikely to reduce complexity proportionately at national, regional and beneficiary levels, where coordination, negotiation, monitoring and compliance demands may increase. The shift to performance-based payments may improve predictability and reduce invoice-level checks, but it also shifts administrative effort towards costing, milestone-setting, verification and audit.
The key issue for the European Parliament is, therefore, to ensure that simplification delivers real administrative relief in implementation and does not merely replace cost-based burdens with new demands in coordination, performance management and control. The study also highlights the importance of administrative capacity, arguing that performance-based delivery will only work if national and regional authorities have sufficient technical capability in areas such as indicator design, milestone calibration, data systems and compliance management.
- Flexibility, predictability and the EU Facility
The proposals would create a more flexible architecture through a larger flexibility amount, a stronger mid-term review and a new EU Facility capable of topping-up national allocations and financing Union actions in response to crises, market disturbances and emerging priorities. This may improve speed, adaptability and Union-level coordination, but it also creates risks of reduced predictability for long-term territorial and sectoral investment, weaker national ownership over programming choices, and greater complexity through overlapping flexibility instruments.
The study underlines that the EU Facility is broader than a narrow emergency reserve and could evolve into a more open-ended instrument for Union-level reprioritisation during implementation. This has direct implications for the European Parliament, notably the need to seek clearer legal boundaries, more detailed allocation criteria and activation triggers, and stronger scrutiny of annual work programmes and strategic reporting.
- Programming flexibility, territorial earmarking and thematic concentration
The proposals make Cohesion Policy more flexible but weaken some territorial and thematic protections. This may improve adaptability, but it may also reduce the policy’s place-based focus and strategic clarity. The broader and more integrated NRPP structure could encourage standardisation at a higher level, even where the formal framework appears more flexible. The 2025 Mid-Term Review already points in this direction, with greater emphasis on priorities such as competitiveness, defence and housing. However, uptake of these priorities has been uneven, showing that flexibility does not guarantee balanced implementation.
For the European Parliament, the central issue is whether strategic focus can be preserved without undermining territorial responsiveness. The study suggests that the Parliament should seek clearer territorial targeting, more transparency in reprioritisation, and stronger safeguards for partnership and multilevel governance.
- Interreg simplification and flexibility
Compared with the previous programming period, the fundamentals of Interreg in terms of its strands, rationales, partnerships and core geographies remain broadly intact. However, the post-2027 framework also points towards a more centralised and strategically steered Interreg in some respects. In particular, the increased use of implementing acts and the stronger performance-based approach represent a significant departure from the current model.
These reforms may make Interreg more streamlined and more focused on results, but they also risk creating new challenges for legal certainty, operational clarity and effective delivery in a multi-country setting. From the European Parliament’s perspective, a key priority is to ensure that operational provisions governing Interreg remain sufficiently anchored in the basic act, and that any performance-based model is adapted to the specific realities of cross-border, transnational and interregional cooperation.
Conclusions
The study concludes that the Commission’s proposals would reshape both the architecture and delivery logic of Cohesion Policy. Although the reforms respond to real weaknesses in the current system, including procedural complexity, limited adaptability and cumbersome implementation, they also imply a broader change in policy logic. Cohesion Policy would move away from a rule-bound, programme-based and territorially differentiated model towards one that is more integrated, more discretionary and more strongly steered through national plans, performance arrangements and Commission-led reprioritisation. The expected gains from simplification, flexibility and performance are therefore likely to be uneven. The overarching challenge for the European Parliament is to ensure that the future framework improves responsiveness and effectiveness without weakening predictability, regional and local ownership or the cohesion rationale of the policy itself.
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