The European Commission last week approved the prolongation of the Economic
and Fiscal Regime (REF) of the Canary Islands until the end of 2006.
The measure is intended to promote economic activity in the Canary Islands,
enabling companies established in an area qualified as a peripheral region to
overcome their natural structural handicaps. The aid, with a budget of €270.5
million, provides an incentive to business creation and expansion by supporting
productive investments and by contributing to their capitalisation.
Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said “This aid measure will significantly
contribute to offset the permanent handicaps of the Canary Islands arising from
their peripheral geographical location by giving the necessary incentives to
facilitate productive investment and economic diversification”.
The purpose of the “Economic and Fiscal Regime of Canarias – Law
19/94” is to facilitate productive investment in companies as well as
the diversification of economic activity and the pooling of resources to undertake
investment in fixed assets in the Canary Islands, one of the outermost regions
of the EU.
The approved measure comprises the following aid mechanisms:
- a fiscal discount on the income derived from the sale of goods in the stockbreeding,
fisheries, agricultural and industrial sectors, produced in the Canary Islands;
- a tax reduction for companies on profits generated in their establishments
located in the Canary Islands which are assigned to constitute an investment
reserve. The amounts assigned to this reserve should be employed for one of
the following purposes: acquisition of fixed assets located in the Canary
Islands; or subscription of shares or participations in the capital of enterprises
that carry out their activities in the Canary Islands, as long as these enterprises
make investments in fixed assets.
The Commission has assessed the aid in the light of the current Guidelines
on national regional aid and has taken into account that the Canary Islands
are fully eligible, under the derogation provided for in Article 87(3)(a) of
the EC Treaty, for aid in favour of regions with high unemployment or a low
standard of living until 31 December 2006.
Nevertheless, the proposed measures could not be considered as aid for initial
investment within the definition of the regional aid guidelines and constitute
therefore operating aid, which is in general prohibited under EC Treaty state
aid rules. However, Article 299(2) of the EC Treaty recognises the specific
permanent handicaps of outermost regions: remoteness, insularity, small size,
difficult topography and climate, and economic dependence on a few products.
The Commission therefore allows operating aid which is not progressively reduced
and restricted in time, provided it is limited to offsetting the additional
costs arising in the pursuit of economic activity in these regions.
The Commission’s examination of the Economic and Fiscal Regime (REF)
of the Canary Islands showed that the aid is proportionate to the additional
costs resulting from these handicaps, and is thus in line with the general objective
of furthering the development of the outermost regions.