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Questions swell in Eswatini over five men deported from US
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Activist boat Handala seized off Gaza brought to Israel
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Humanoid robots embodiment of China's AI ambitions
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Israel says opening routes into Gaza to increase food aid
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Greece gets EU help to battle disastrous wildfires
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Pogacar leads peloton into Paris for Tour de France climax
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Trump's Turnberry visit puts British Open back on agenda
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Israel declares Gaza fighting pause amid deepening hunger crisis
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McIntosh launches bid for world domination as Ledecky fires warning
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Australia beat WIndies by three wickets in fourth T20I match
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Kalinskaya meets Fernandez, De Minaur faces Spaniard in DC finals
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Iraqi women table tennis players chase Paralympic dreams
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Urgent need for 'global approach' on AI regulation: UN tech chief
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Amateur football leagues win over cynical Chinese fans
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US Fed poised to hold off on rate cuts, defying Trump pressure
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Battling tariffs is no trivial pursuit for US games retailer
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Ecuador deports more than 600 Colombian inmates as Bogota cries foul
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Trump, EU chief seek deal in transatlantic tariffs standoff
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Wallabies hire New Zealand's Donnelly to help Schmidt
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New Zealand farmers battle pine forests to 'save our sheep'
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Wallabies will not 'wallow in self-pity' after crushing Lions loss
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Thailand, Cambodia clash despite ceasefire hopes
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'Project Hail Mary' sends Ryan Gosling, and Comic-Con, into outer space
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'Welcome to hell': Freed migrants tell of horrors in Salvadoran jail
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Israel air drops humanitarian aid packages into Gaza
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Messi-less Miami held by Cincinnati in MLS
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Fernandes double as Man Utd sink West Ham in Premier League US friendly
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Kalinskaya to face Fernandez in DC Open women's final
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DEEP Robotics Showcases Core Technologies & Real-World Applications of Embodied Intelligence Robots at WAIC 2025
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DEA Scrambles to Defend Marijuana Decision Amid Supreme Court Ruling, Legal Collapse And Public Outrage
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Ecuador deports hundreds of Colombian inmates as Bogota cries foul
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Sub sinks Morocco as Nigeria are crowned African football queens
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Bournemouth stroll past Everton in Premier League friendly
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Thailand says open to 'dialogue' with Cambodia to end conflict
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Israel allows aid air dops to Gaza to resume
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Arsenal seal swoop for Swedish international Gyokeres
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England sweat on Stokes' bowling fitness in bid for India series win
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Powerhouse Gyokeres can give Arsenal missing edge
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Britain leads calls for airdrops as Gaza hunger crisis deepens
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Ecuador deports more than 800 Colombian inmates as Bogota cries foul
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Arsenal sign Swedish international Viktor Gyokeres
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Spain's pioneers 'knocking down walls' with run to Euro 2025 final
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Greece asks for EU help in battling wildfires
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Rahul and Gill frustrate England in fourth Test after Stokes century
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Norris reassured by pole after Belgian Grand Prix 'worries'
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England ready to meet challenge of 'fantastic' Spain in Euro 2025 final
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US migrant raids spark boom for private detention providers
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'Make America Gay Again': Amsterdam pride gets political
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Over 600 malnourished children die in six months in Nigeria: MSF
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Hamilton holds hands up after 'unacceptable' qualifying
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Next Generation EU a scam?
The Next Generation EU (NGEU) fund, an unprecedented European Union economic recovery package, was launched in 2020 to help member states recover from the economic and social impact of the COVID 19 pandemic. With a volume of €750 billion, divided into grants and loans, NGEU aims to make Europe greener, more digital and more resilient (European Commission, Recovery plan for Europe). However, the implementation and effectiveness of the programme have been met with controversy and criticism, leading some to call it the EU's ‘biggest scam’. This report analyses the reasons for this criticism, based on fraud cases, political tensions and economic doubts.
Fraud and misuse of funds
A key point of criticism is the high number of fraud cases affecting the programme. In April 2024, 22 people were arrested in Italy, Austria, Romania and Slovakia on charges of embezzling €600 million from the Italian National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), which is part of NGEU. The criminals used a network of accountants, service providers and notaries to fraudulently obtain non-repayable funds and transfer the money abroad.
Another case concerns the procurement of power generators for Ukraine, which was managed by the Polish government agency for strategic reserves (RARS). The European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) recommended the recovery of over €91 million due to serious irregularities, including inflated prices and a lack of competition (European Commission, OLAF completes investigation into suspected serious irregularities). These cases are not isolated: in 2022, OLAF recorded a 7% increase in fraud cases, with irregularities worth €1.77 billion. At the end of 2024, the European Public Prosecutor's Office (EPPO) was handling 311 active cases with an estimated €2.8 billion in damages to the EU budget, mostly related to NGEU (Balkan Insight, EU Fraud Keeps Rising as Prosecutors Investigate 38% More Cases in 2024).
Political controversies and delays
Besides the fraud cases, there were political tensions that delayed the implementation of NGEU. Poland and Hungary initially blocked the adoption of the fund due to concerns about the rule of law conditions. This led to delays in the disbursement of funds and political tensions within the EU (Wikipedia, Next Generation EU). Article 7 proceedings were opened against both countries, but their mutual support prevented sanctions, complicating the implementation of the fund (Wikipedia, Next Generation EU). These controversies show that NGEU was not only a technical financial instrument but also a political battleground, undermining confidence in the programme.
Scepticism from economists and political actors
Some economists and political actors express scepticism about the effectiveness and purpose of NGEU. A study from Comparative European Politics (2022) argues that the allocation of funds was based on existing economic and political vulnerabilities rather than the direct consequences of the pandemic. Countries with strong Euroscepticism and structural problems received the most funding per capita, regardless of the severity of the health crisis (Comparative European Politics, Voices from the past: economic and political vulnerabilities in the making of next generation EU). This could indicate that NGEU is more of a tool for stabilising weak economies, which some may see as a misuse of funds.
In Italy, the main recipient, there are doubts about the government's ability to use the funds efficiently. Although the government is celebrating the receipt of the fifth tranche of NGEU, the challenge remains of actually spending the funds and implementing the planned projects (Euractiv, Italy and the challenge of spending European funds). These difficulties underline the concern that NGEU may not deliver the promised results.

Japan's financial precipice

Iraq vs. Iran – The end?

France's debt is growing

Azerbaijan defies Russia

Geopolitics: Peru's balancing act

Spain defies NATO's 5% goal

Israel's Covert Nuclear Rise

Iran's Nuclear Ambitions

Germany's Anti-Woke Tide

Demographic Collapse Crisis

Israel's War on Iran's Ayatollahs
