Amendment Awp C 2022 1319 07032022 - en
Amendment Awp C 2022 1319 07032022 - en
Amendment Awp C 2022 1319 07032022 - en
Brussels, 7.3.2022
C(2022) 1319 final
of 7.3.2022
EN EN
COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION
of 7.3.2022
1
OJ L 193, 30.7.2018, p. 1
2
OJ L 189, 20.5.2021, p. 1
3
OJ L 330, 20.9.2021, p. 1
4
OJ L 209, 9.6.2021, p. 1
5
OJ L 231, 30.6.2021, p. 159
EN 1 EN
the work programme for 20226 was adopted on 08 November 2021 for a Union budget
contribution of EUR 3 895 431 990.
(2) In order to allocate the additional funds made available in the adopted budget for 2022
and the revised amounts of the internal assigned revenues and external assigned
revenues, it is necessary to revise the work programme and its financing.
(3) In accordance with Article 26(1) of the Common Provisions Regulation (CPR) and
Article 17(8) of the Erasmus+ Regulation, the German authorities have requested that
a share of their national allocation under the European Social Fund Plus (ESF+) is
transferred to Erasmus+. As established in Article 26(2) of CPR, the transferred
resources are to be implemented for the benefit of the Member State concerned.
Therefore, in order for the transferred resources to be allocated to Higher education
mobility it is necessary to amend the work programme and its financing.
(4) The changes to the work programme 2022 and the financing should cover the financial
support to certain programme actions for Erasmus+ that are to be dedicated to
preparing and carrying out activities in line with the European Year of Youth 20227
(dissemination and communication activities, European Year of Youth National
coordination, European Youth Forum, Eurodesk Brussels-link, training and
cooperation activities in the field of youth, EU Youth dialogue: support to National
Working Groups).
(5) This amended work programme also reflects the expectation of a gradual resumption
of demand for mobility, as well as other minor budgetary and technical changes and
corrections.
(6) Commission Implementing Decision C(2021)7862 should therefore be amended
accordingly.
(7) The measures provided for in this Decision are in accordance with the opinion of the
Committee established by Article 34 of Regulation (EU) 2021/817,
HAS DECIDED AS FOLLOWS:
Article 1
Article 2 of the Commission Implementing Decision C(2021)7862 is replaced by the
following:
‘ Article 2
Union contribution
The maximum Union contribution for the implementation of the programme for 2022 is set at
EUR 4 016 268 5008 and shall be financed from the appropriations entered in the following
lines of the general budget of the Union:
budget line 07 03 01 01: EUR 2 421 707 626;
budget line 07 03 01 02: EUR 726 607 374;
6
Commission Implementing Decision of 08.11.2021 on the financing of "Erasmus+": the Union
Programme for Education, Training, Youth and Sport and the adoption of the work programme for 2022
[C(2021)7862].
7
Decision (EU) 2021/2316 of the European Parliament and of the Council adopted on 22/12/2021, OJ
EU L462
8
Rounded up due to decimals approximation
EN 2 EN
budget line 07 03 02: EUR 381 668 000;
budget line 07 03 03: EUR 70 121 500;
budget line 07 02 13: EUR 15 000 0009;
budget line 14 02 01 50: EUR 332 787 000;
budget line 15 02 01 02: EUR 68 377 000.
The appropriations provided for in the first paragraph may also cover interest due for late
payment.
The implementation of this Decision is subject to the availability of the appropriations and
contributions of EFTA and other participating countries to the programme.’
Article 2
The Annex to the Commission Implementing Decision C(2021)7862 is replaced by the Annex
to this Decision.
Done at Brussels, 7.3.2022
9
The amount is an estimation and foreseen to be transferred by Germany from its national allocation
under the ESF+ to Erasmus+ for 2022 (in line with Article 26 of Regulation (EU) 2021/1060) and it is
under reservation of the figure to be defined in the final version of the Partnership Agreement and the
corresponding transfer on adoption of the Partnership Agreement.
EN 3 EN
COMMISSION
EUROPÉENNE
Bruxelles, le 7.3.2022
C(2022) 1319 final
du 7.3.2022
FR FR
DÉCISION D’EXÉCUTION DE LA COMMISSION
du 7.3.2022
LA COMMISSION EUROPÉENNE,
vu le traité sur le fonctionnement de l’Union européenne,
vu le règlement (UE, Euratom) 2018/1046 du Parlement européen et du Conseil du
18 juillet 2018 relatif aux règles financières applicables au budget général de l’Union,
modifiant les règlements (UE) nº 1296/2013, (UE) nº 1301/2013, (UE) nº 1303/2013, (UE)
nº 1304/2013, (UE) nº 1309/2013, (UE) nº 1316/2013, (UE) nº 223/2014, (UE) nº 283/2014 et
la décision nº 541/2014/UE, et abrogeant le règlement (UE, Euratom) nº 966/20121, et
notamment son article 110,
vu le règlement (UE) 2021/8172 du Parlement européen et du Conseil du 20 mai 2021
établissant Erasmus+, le programme de l’Union pour l’éducation et la formation, la jeunesse
et le sport, et abrogeant le règlement(UE) no 1288/2013, et notamment son article 22,
vu le règlement (UE) 2021/15293 du Parlement européen et du Conseil du 15 septembre 2021
instituant l’instrument d’aide de préadhésion (IAP III), et notamment son article 5,
paragraphe 3,
vu le règlement (UE) 2021/9474 du Parlement européen et du Conseil du 9 juin 2021
établissant l’instrument de voisinage, de coopération au développement et de coopération
internationale — Europe dans le monde, modifiant et abrogeant la décision n° 466/2014/UE
du Parlement européen et du Conseil et abrogeant le règlement (UE) 2017/1601 du Parlement
européen et du Conseil et le règlement (CE, Euratom) n° 480/2009 du Conseil, et notamment
son article 16,
vu le règlement (UE) 2021/10605 du Parlement européen et du Conseil du 24 juin 2021
portant dispositions communes relatives au Fonds européen de développement régional, au
Fonds social européen plus, au Fonds de cohésion, au Fonds pour une transition juste et au
Fonds européen pour les affaires maritimes, la pêche et l’aquaculture, et établissant les règles
financières applicables à ces Fonds et au Fonds «Asile, migration et intégration», au Fonds
pour la sécurité intérieure et à l’instrument de soutien financier à la gestion des frontières et à
la politique des visas, et notamment son article 26,
considérant ce qui suit:
(1) la décision d’exécution C(2021) 7862 de la Commission relative au financement
d’Erasmus+, le programme de l’Union pour l’éducation, la formation, la jeunesse et le
1
JO L 193 du 30.7.2018, p. 1.
2
JO L 189 du 20.5.2021, p. 1.
3
JO L 330 du 20.9.2021, p. 1.
4
JO L 209 du 9.6.2021, p. 1.
5
JO L 231 du 30.6.2021, p. 159.
FR 1 FR
sport, et à l’adoption du programme de travail pour 20226 adoptée le 8 novembre 2021
prévoit une contribution budgétaire de l’Union de 3 895 431 990 EUR.
(2) Afin d’allouer les fonds supplémentaires mis à disposition dans le budget adopté pour
2022 ainsi que les montants révisés des recettes affectées internes et externes, il est
nécessaire de réviser le programme de travail et son financement.
(3) Conformément à l’article 26, paragraphe 1, du règlement portant dispositions
communes (RPDC) et à l’article 17, paragraphe 8, du règlement Erasmus +, les
autorités allemandes ont demandé qu’une part de leur dotation nationale au titre du
Fonds social européen plus (FSE +) soit transférée à Erasmus+. Comme le prévoit
l’article 26, paragraphe 2, du RPDC, les ressources transférées doivent être mises en
œuvre au profit de l’État membre concerné. Par conséquent, pour que les ressources
transférées soient affectées à la mobilité dans l’enseignement supérieur, il est
nécessaire de modifier le programme de travail et son financement.
(4) Les modifications apportées au programme de travail 2022 et au financement
devraient couvrir le soutien financier apporté à certaines actions du programme
Erasmus+ qui doivent être consacrées à la préparation et à la réalisation d’activités
conformes à l’Année européenne de la jeunesse 20227 (activités de diffusion et de
communication, Année européenne de la coordination nationale de la jeunesse, Forum
européen de la jeunesse, bureau Eurodesk Brussels-link, activités de formation et de
coopération dans le domaine de la jeunesse, dialogue de l’UE en faveur de la jeunesse:
soutien aux groupes de travail nationaux).
(5) Ce programme de travail modifié reflète également l’attente d’une reprise progressive
de la demande de mobilité, ainsi que d’autres modifications et corrections budgétaires
et techniques mineures.
(6) Il convient donc de modifier la décision d’exécution C(2021) 7862 de la Commission
en conséquence.
(7) Les mesures prévues par la présente décision sont conformes à l'avis du comité institué
par l'article 34 du règlement (UE) 2021/817,
DÉCIDE:
Article premier
L'article 2 de la décision d'exécution C(2021) 7862 de la Commission est remplacé par le
texte suivant:
«Article 2
Contribution de l’Union
Le montant maximal de la contribution de l’Union destinée à la mise en œuvre du programme
pour 2022 est fixé à 4 016 268 500 EUR8, à financer sur les crédits inscrits aux lignes
suivantes du budget général de l’Union:
ligne budgétaire 07 03 01 01: 2 421 707 626 EUR;
6
Décision d’exécution C(08,11) 2021 de la Commission relative au financement d’Erasmus+, le
programme de l’Union pour l’éducation, la formation, la jeunesse et le sport, et à l’adoption du
programme de travail pour 2022 [C(2021)7862].
7
Décision (UE) 2021/2316 du Parlement européen et du Conseil adoptée le 22/12/2021, JO L 462.
8
Arrondi à l’unité.
FR 2 FR
ligne budgétaire 07 03 01 02: 726 607 374 EUR;
ligne budgétaire 07 03 02: 381 668 000 EUR;
ligne budgétaire 07 03 03: 70 121 500 EUR;
ligne budgétaire 07 02 13: 15 000 000 EUR9;
ligne budgétaire 14 02 01 50: 332 787 000 EUR;
ligne budgétaire 15 02 01 02: 68 377 000 EUR.
Les crédits prévus au premier alinéa peuvent également couvrir les intérêts de retard.
La mise en œuvre de la présente décision est subordonnée à la disponibilité des crédits et des
contributions des pays de l’AELE et des autres pays participant au programme.»
Article 2
L’annexe de la décision d'exécution C(2021) 7862 de la Commission est remplacée par
l’annexe de la présente décision.
Fait à Bruxelles, le 7.3.2022
Par la Commission
Mariya GABRIEL
Membre de la Commission
9
Ce montant est une estimation et devrait être transféré par l’Allemagne de sa dotation nationale au titre
du FSE+ à Erasmus+ pour 2022 [conformément à l’article 26 du règlement (UE) 2021/1060] et il fait
l’objet d’une réserve concernant le chiffre à définir dans la version finale de l’accord de partenariat et le
transfert correspondant lors de l’adoption de l’accord de partenariat.
FR 3 FR
EUROPÄISCHE
KOMMISSION
vom 7.3.2022
zur Änderung des Durchführungsbeschlusses C(2021) 7862 der Kommission über die
Finanzierung von Erasmus+, dem Programm der Union für allgemeine und berufliche
Bildung, Jugend und Sport, und zur Annahme des Arbeitsprogramms für 2022
DE DE
DURCHFÜHRUNGSBESCHLUSS DER KOMMISSION
vom 7.3.2022
zur Änderung des Durchführungsbeschlusses C(2021) 7862 der Kommission über die
Finanzierung von Erasmus+, dem Programm der Union für allgemeine und berufliche
Bildung, Jugend und Sport, und zur Annahme des Arbeitsprogramms für 2022
1
ABl. L 193 vom 30.7.2018, S. 1.
2
ABl. L 189 vom 20.5.2021, S. 1
3
ABl. L 330 vom 20.9.2021, S. 1.
4
ABl. L 209 vom 9.6.2021, S. 1
5
ABl. L 231 vom 30.6.2021, S. 159.
DE 1 DE
Jugend und Sport, und zur Annahme des Arbeitsprogramms für 20226 wurde am
8. November 2021 mit einem Beitrag aus dem Unionshaushalt in Höhe von
3 895 431 990 EUR angenommen.
(2) Das Arbeitsprogramm und die darin vorgesehenen Finanzierungsmodalitäten müssen
überarbeitet werden, damit die im verabschiedeten Haushalt für 2022 zusätzlich
bereitgestellten Mittel und die geänderten Beträge aus internen zweckgebundenen
Einnahmen und externen zweckgebundenen Einnahmen zugewiesen werden können.
(3) Gemäß Artikel 26 Absatz 1 der Dachverordnung und Artikel 17 Absatz 8 der
Erasmus+-Verordnung haben die deutschen Behörden beantragt, dass ein Teil ihrer
nationalen Mittelzuweisung im Rahmen des Europäischen Sozialfonds Plus (ESF+)
auf Erasmus+ übertragen wird. Wie in Artikel 26 Absatz 2 der Dachverordnung
bestimmt, werden die übertragenen Mittel zugunsten des betreffenden Mitgliedstaats
eingesetzt. Damit die übertragenen Mittel der Mobilität im Hochschulbereich
zugewiesen werden können, ist es daher notwendig, das Arbeitsprogramm und dessen
Finanzierungsmodalitäten zu ändern.
(4) Die Änderungen am Arbeitsprogramm 2022 und dessen Finanzierungsmodalitäten
sollten die finanzielle Unterstützung bestimmter Programmmaßnahmen im Rahmen
von Erasmus+ umfassen, die der Vorbereitung und Durchführung von Tätigkeiten im
Einklang mit dem Europäischen Jahr der Jugend 20227 gewidmet werden sollen
(Verbreitungs- und Kommunikationsmaßnahmen, Koordinierung des Europäischen
Jahres der Jugend, Europäisches Jugendforum, Eurodesk-Verbindungsstelle Brüssel,
Schulungs- und Kooperationsmaßnahmen im Jugendbereich, EU-Jugenddialog:
Unterstützung der nationalen Arbeitsgruppen).
(5) Dieses geänderte Arbeitsprogramm trägt auch der Erwartung einer allmählichen
Wiederbelebung der Mobilitätsnachfrage sowie anderen geringfügigen
haushaltspolitischen und technischen Änderungen und Korrekturen Rechnung.
(6) Der Durchführungsbeschluss C(2021) 7862 der Kommission sollte daher entsprechend
geändert werden.
(7) Die in diesem Beschluss vorgesehenen Maßnahmen entsprechen der Stellungnahme
des nach Artikel 34 der Verordnung (EU) 2021/817 eingesetzten Ausschusses —
BESCHLIEẞT:
Artikel 1
Artikel 2 des Durchführungsbeschlusses C(2021) 7862 der Kommission erhält folgende
Fassung:
6
Durchführungsbeschluss der Kommission vom 8.11.2021 über die Finanzierung von Erasmus+, dem
Programm der Union für allgemeine und berufliche Bildung, Jugend und Sport, und zur Annahme des
Arbeitsprogramms für 2022 [C(2021) 7862].
7
Beschluss (EU) 2021/2316 des Europäischen Parlaments und des Rates vom 22.12.2021, ABl. L 462.
DE 2 DE
„Artikel 2
Beitrag der Union
Der Höchstbeitrag der Union für die Durchführung des Programms für 2022 beläuft sich auf
4 016 268 500 EUR8 und wird aus Mitteln finanziert, die unter den folgenden Haushaltslinien
des Gesamthaushaltsplans der Union eingestellt wurden:
Haushaltslinie 07 03 01 01: 2 421 707 626 EUR
Haushaltslinie 07 03 01 02: 726 607 374 EUR
Haushaltslinie 07 03 02: 381 668 000 EUR
Haushaltslinie 07 03 03: 70 121 500 EUR
Haushaltslinie 07 02 13: 15 000 000 EUR9
Haushaltslinie 14 02 01 50: 332 787 000 EUR
Haushaltslinie 15 02 01 02: 68 377 000 EUR
Die in Absatz 1 genannten Haushaltsmittel können auch Verzugszinsen abdecken.
Dieser Beschluss kann nur umgesetzt werden, wenn die Mittel und Beiträge der EFTA-
Staaten und anderer an dem Programm teilnehmender Länder bereitgestellt werden.“
Artikel 2
Der Anhang des Durchführungsbeschlusses C(2021) 7862 der Kommission wird durch den
Anhang des vorliegenden Beschlusses ersetzt.
Brüssel, den 7.3.2022
8
Aufgerundet auf ganze Zahlen.
9
Es handelt sich um den geschätzten Betrag, den Deutschland voraussichtlich von seiner nationalen
Zuweisung im Rahmen des ESF+ (im Einklang mit Artikel 26 der Verordnung (EU) 2021/1060) auf
Erasmus+ für 2022 übertragen wird; der Betrag steht unter dem Vorbehalt der in der endgültigen
Fassung der Partnerschaftsvereinbarung festzulegenden Zahl und der entsprechenden Übertragung bei
Annahme der Partnerschaftsvereinbarung.
DE 3 DE
EN
ANNEX
The 2022 annual work programme for the implementation of Erasmus+: the Union
Programme for Education, Training, Youth and Sport
1
Contents
2
Key Action 2........................................................................................................................ 101
1. GRANTS AWARDED BY MEANS OF CALLS FOR PROPOSALS ....................... 101
Key Action 3........................................................................................................................ 103
1. ACTIONS IMPLEMENTED UNDER INDIRECT MANAGEMENT ........................ 103
2. GRANTS AWARDED BY EXCEPTION TO CALLS FOR PROPOSALS –
ARTICLE 195 FR ........................................................................................ 104
3. PROCUREMENTS ......................................................................................... 106
4. PRIZES ........................................................................................................ 107
5. CALLS FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST ....................................................... 108
Management fees of National Agencies ....................................................................................... 109
Part III - Budget............................................................................................................................ 110
1. AVAILABLE APPROPRIATIONS AND DISTRIBUTION BY BUDGET LINE ........ 110
2. DISTRIBUTION OF AVAILABLE APPROPRIATIONS BY ACTIONS AND FIELDS
– BUDGET AND PROGRAMMING TABLES.................................................... 112
3. BREAKDOWN BY COUNTRY OF THE HEADING 2 FUNDS ALLOCATED TO
THE NATIONAL AGENCIES ......................................................................... 122
4. BREAKDOWN (BY INSTRUMENT, GEOGRAPHIC AREA AND COUNTRY) OF
THE HEADING 6 .......................................................................................... 126
5. FUNDS AIMED AT CO-FINANCING THE MANAGEMENT COSTS OF
NATIONAL AGENCIES: ............................................................................... 128
6. FUNDS FOR THE ERASMUS+ TRAINING AND COOPERATION ACTIVITIES,
NETWORKS AND BODIES............................................................................. 129
3
ERASMUS+ DRAFT ANNUAL WORK PROGRAMME 2022
According to the Regulation (EU) 2021/817 of the European Parliament and of the Council of
20 May 2021 establishing Erasmus+: the Union Programme for education, training, youth and
sport and repealing Regulation No 1288/20131 (hereinafter 'the Regulation'), the general
objective of the Programme is to support, through lifelong learning, the educational,
professional and personal development of people in education, training, youth and sport, in
Europe and beyond, thereby contributing to sustainable growth, quality jobs and social
cohesion, to driving innovation, and to strengthening European identity and active citizenship.
The Programme shall be a key instrument for building a European Education Area,
supporting the implementation of the European strategic framework for European
cooperation in education and training towards the European Education Area and
beyond, with its underlying sectoral agendas, advancing youth policy cooperation under
the Union Youth Strategy 2019-2027 and developing the European dimension in sport.
The programme will also contribute to putting in practice the first principle of the European
Pillar of Social Rights and to implementing the European Skills Agenda, and offers a strong
international dimension contributing to a stronger voice for Europe in the world.
In this framework, the programme has the following specific objectives to promote:
- the learning mobility of individuals and groups, and cooperation, quality, inclusion
and equity, excellence, creativity, and innovation at the level of organisations and
policies in the field of education and training;
- non-formal and informal learning mobility and active participation among young
people, and cooperation, quality, inclusion, creativity and innovation at the level of
organisations and policies in the field of youth;
- the learning mobility of sport staff, and cooperation, quality, inclusion, creativity and
innovation at the level of sport organisations and sport policies.
In order to achieve its objectives, the Erasmus+ Programme implements the following
Actions:
Key Action 1 – Learning mobility;
Key Action 2 – Cooperation among organisations and institutions;
Key Action 3 – Support to policy development and cooperation;
Jean Monnet actions.
1
OJ L 189, 28.5.2021, p. 1
4
The programme architecture of the period 2014-2020 and its main instruments and delivery
mechanisms are largely maintained, with the exception of Sport activities that are now
streamlined and follow the same structure as for Education and training and Youth chapters.
The improvements and new actions are implemented without affecting the general stability of
the programme in terms of structure and scope, building on existing actions and ensuring
continuity with the 2021-2027 programme, while aiming to increase impact. In terms of
scope, the programme continues to cover all education and training sectors i.e. school
education, vocational education and training, higher education and adult learning, as well as
youth and sport, but in a more streamlined manner with better focused and aligned priorities.
EU Member States take part in the Erasmus+ Programme. In accordance with Article 33(2)
and (3) of the Council Decision 2013/755/EU on the association of the overseas countries and
territories with the European Union2, the Union has to ensure that individuals and
organisations from Overseas Countries and Territories (OCTs) can take part in educational
and vocational training related initiatives of the Union on the same basis as Member States.
In addition, in accordance with article 19 of the Erasmus+ Regulation, the following third
countries are associated to the programme in 2022, subject to the signature of specific
agreements covering the association of these third countries to the Programme:
- members of the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) which are members of the
European Economic Area (EEA): Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein;
- acceding countries, candidate countries and potential candidates: Republic of North
Macedonia, Republic of Turkey and Republic of Serbia.
Individuals and organisations from the OCTs are participating in the programme on an EU
Member State or third country associated to the programme status, being the Member State
with which they are connected.
Furthermore, in accordance with article 20 of the Regulation, entities from other third
countries not associated to the programme can be eligible in Erasmus+ actions in duly
justified cases and in the Union interest.
The European Commission (Directorate-General Education, Youth, Sport and Culture - EAC)
is responsible for the implementation of the Erasmus+ Programme. It manages the budget and
sets priorities, targets and criteria for the Programme on an on-going basis. For actions funded
by the EU external action instruments, the Directorate-General for International Partnerships
(DG INTPA) and the Directorate General for Neighbourhood and Enlargement Negotiations
(DG NEAR) set the priorities in accordance with the EU’s external policy. Furthermore, it
guides and monitors the general implementation, follow-up and evaluation of the Programme
at European level. The European Commission also bears overall responsibility for the
supervision and coordination of the structures in charge of implementing the Programme at
national level (indirect management). It also directly manages certain actions of the
Programme. At European level, the European Education and Culture Executive Agency
(EACEA) is responsible for the implementation of certain actions of the Erasmus+
Programme (direct management).
2
OJ L 344, 19.12.2013, p.1
3
[minor changes in delegation of actions may take place before finalisation]
5
Implementation by the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA) is
carried out according to the Commission Decision C(2021)951 delegating powers to the
European Education and Culture Executive Agency with a view to the performance of tasks
linked to the implementation of Union programmes in the field of education, audiovisual and
culture, citizenship and solidarity comprising, in particular, implementation of appropriations
entered in the general budget of the Union.
Some actions under Key Actions 2 and 3 in the fields of adult education, vocational education
and training as well as skills and qualifications are partly or fully co-delegated to the
Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion (DG EMPL). It is also
foreseen to co-delegate certain actions under Key Action 3 related to multilingualism to the
Directorate-General for Translation (DGT). The co-delegated actions are indicated in Part II
of this Work Programme. DG EAC liaises closely on all aspects related to the international
actions funded by the Directorate-General for International Partnerships (DG INTPA) and the
Directorate General for Neighbourhood and Enlargement Negotiations (DG NEAR), and
where relevant with the Foreign Policy Instruments Service (FPI) and the Delegations of the
European Union in the third countries not associated to the programme.
The Erasmus+ Programme is mainly implemented through indirect management. The
European Commission entrusts budget implementation tasks to designated National Agencies
established in each Member State and third country associated to the programme, in line with
Article 62 (1)(c) and Article 154 of the Financial Regulation4. National authorities monitor
and supervise the management of the Programme at national level.
In accordance with Articles 62 (1)(c)(ii) and 156(1) of the Financial Regulation, with
reference to Pillar Assessed International Organisations, the Commission may entrust them
budget implementation tasks via the conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect
management mode.
4 Regulation (EU, Euratom) 2018/1046 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 July 2018 on the
financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and amending Regulation (EC) No 2012/2002, Regulations (EU)
No 1296/2013, (EU) 1301/2013, (EU) No 1303/2013, (EU) No 1304/2013, (EU) No 1309/2013, (EU) No 1316/2013, (EU)
No 223/2014, (EU) No 283/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council and Decision No 541/2014/EU of the
European Parliament and of the Council and repealing Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012, OJ L 193, 30.7.2018.
6
2. ERASMUS+ IN 2022
Education, training, youth and sport have a crucial role to play in helping the Union in
reorienting its economic model towards more sustainability, with green and digital transitions
as its transformative drivers. Rooted in the Rome Declaration of 25 March 20175 where the
EU leaders pledged to work towards a Union where young people receive the best education
and training and can study and find jobs across the continent, the European Pillar of Social
Rights6 that enshrines the right to quality and inclusive education, training and lifelong
learning, and the new Strategic Agenda for the EU for 2019-2024 that stresses that Member
States “must step up investment in people’s skills and education”, President von der Leyen
committed to making the European Education Area a reality by 2025. To achieve this, the
objective is to make quality and borderless learning available for all, everywhere in Europe, to
change the culture of education towards lifelong learning, and to get Europe up to speed on
digital skills for young people and adults alike.
Education is essential for the personal, social and professional fulfilment of the citizens. It
also stands at the heart of Europe’s social market economy as the foundation for economic
and social convergence. It helps strengthen people’s employability, helps building societal
and personal empowerment and resilience, and helps the EU play a stronger role in a global,
increasingly digital and knowledge-based world. The European Education Area7 will also
help preventing the restrictions necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic from becoming a
structural barrier to learning, skills development and employment prospects of young people.
The European Education Area – for which Erasmus+ is instrumental – aims to turn Europe
into a genuine European learning space where Member States cooperate closely based on a
shared vision for making Europe ready to face the digital and green transitions.
Erasmus+ also remains true to its mission for 35 years i.e. being the Union main instrument
to support young people’s mobility, offering increased opportunities for high quality
level learning mobility for learners and staff, enabling the pursuit of studies and learning
paths in different stages of life. In this respect, the programme should be in a position to
support a resumed demand for mobility in 2022, after the restrictions it suffered in the context
of the COVID-19 pandemic (provided that the sanitary situation allows for it). As a flagship
Union’s programme, Erasmus+ will increase investment in initiatives that support learning
opportunities for all, educational equity and increase participation rates of people with
fewer opportunities, through flexible and simple participation formats, more help prepare
and accompany participants in their Erasmus+ learning adventure, but also through financial
support for those who thought Erasmus+ is not for them.
5
http://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2017/03/25/rome-declaration/pdf
6
https://ec.europa.eu/commission/priorities/deeper-and-fairer-economic-and-monetary-union/european-pillar-
social-rights_en; the Pillar of Social Rights builds on previous initiatives towards a more social Europe,
including the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU.
7
COM (2020) 625 final.
7
The programme will also contribute to deliver on the twin digital and green transitions
through horizontal priorities as well as through dedicated actions offering fora to exchange,
collaborate, mobilise expertise and develop creative approaches. Access to high quality
digital learning, foster teachers’, youth leaders’ and youth workers’ capacity to use
digital tools and content, or increasing investment in European online platforms for virtual
cooperation and digital education are among the key actions the programme is supporting.
Sustainability remains a ‘fil rouge’ for the programme implementation through increased
mobility opportunities which foster the development of competences, enhance career
prospects and engage participants in subject areas which are strategic for the sustainable
growth of our planet.
The programme will support the initial and continuous professional development of
teachers, trainers and youth workers through cooperation and mobility activities in
order to enhance competences and foster their wellbeing, as well as to stimulate and pool their
expertise for future policy design. A key contribution to the European Education Area is the
continued support through Erasmus+ of European Universities alliances of higher education
institutions to cooperate seamlessly across borders and disciplines and in different languages.
In addition, ample opportunities for transnational cooperation for higher education institutions
will continue to be supported, fostering the Union innovation capacity and contributing, inter
alia, to progressing the work on micro-credentials, quality assurance and recognition.
The European Education Area will be achieved through a cooperation framework with
Member States and engagement with stakeholders, which will succeed the current strategic
framework for cooperation in education and training (ET 2020). At Member State-level, the
countries participating in the Erasmus+ programme continue implementing reforms of their
education and training systems, in accordance with their needs, and benefiting from the policy
support of the new framework.
The Digital Education Action Plan8 2021-2027 is part of the Commission’s strategy to make
Europe fit for the digital age with the objective to support the digital transition in Europe. It
outlines a vision for improving digital education in order to meet the challenges arising from
the external shocks of the COVID-19 crisis in the shorter term. It also provides a clear
strategic path for the longer-term digital transformation of education and training in the digital
age. The two strategic priorities of the Digital Education Action Plan: (1) developing a high
performing digital education ecosystem; and (2) enhancing digital skills and competences
for the digital transformation form the basis for the support of the digital dimension of
Erasmus+. These include support to: basic and advanced digital skills and competences;
digital readiness and capacity of institutions; digital pedagogy and expertise for teachers
and youth workers; digital literacy. The Action Plan covers all formal sectors of education
and training, including lifelong learning and all levels (from basic to advanced digital skills),
as well as informal and non-formal learning, including the supporting of youth work for
digital skills development. As part of this vision, the need to establish a more effective and
efficient way to exchange on digital education at EU level, the Erasmus+ programme supports
the establishment of the Digital Education Hub. The Hub’s aim is to enhance cooperation as
8
COM(2020) 624 final
8
a key element to achieve systemic impact and identify sustainable solutions, supporting
education and training in the long term. The Hub creates a space for exchanges, providing
guidance and support, focusing on peer-learning and networking, bringing together existing
research, studies, and communities, a space for co-creation and experimentation.
In line with the Action Plan priorities, the programme will foster the development of digital
skills and competences, develop accessible and high quality digital learning, foster
teachers’ capacity to use digital tools and content, test and promote blended learning
(combination of more than one approach to the learning process, blending school site and
distance learning environments; and digital and non-digital learning tools), and increase long-
standing support and investment in European online platforms for virtual cooperation and
digital education, such as eTwinning and the School Education Gateway - which will be
merged in the European School Education Platform in 2022 - and the Electronic Platform for
Adult Learning in Europe (EPALE). The programme will promote the SELFIE tools for self-
reflection (SELFIE tool for whole school planning and the new SELFIE for Teachers) which
assesses schools’ and teachers’ strengths and weaknesses in their use of technology. The
programme will also promote participation of women and girls in science, technology,
engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields of study, especially in engineering, ICT and
advanced digital skills, through support for guidance or the development of new and forward-
looking higher education curricula for engineering and ICT based on the STEAM9 approach.
In addition, accompanying guidance and mentorship programmes will be set up, focusing on
transitions to the labour market, making them more attractive for women. Such curricula will
be co-designed and co-delivered with STEM employment sectors, and will integrate
education for environmental sustainability, creativity, entrepreneurship and work-based
learning, as well as contact with leading female role models. Complementing physical
mobility under Erasmus+, the programme will offer digital learning opportunities and
virtual exchanges on an unprecedented scale, also with third countries not associated to the
programme.
Young people are at the heart of the European project. Commission President von der Leyen
underlined their role in her State of the Union address to the European Parliament on 15
September 2021, proposing to make 2022 the European Year of Youth, “a year dedicated to
empowering those who have dedicated so much to others”10. Thereby, young people will have
an unprecedented chance to being involved in shaping the future of Europe, notably by
fostering their participation in democratic life. The European Education Area and the EU
Youth Strategy 2019-2027 11 set the framework for the European cooperation in the youth
field, for the benefit of young people. The EU Youth Strategy encourages cooperation in core
youth policy areas in order to engage, connect and empower young people. It promotes cross-
sectoral approaches to address the needs of young people in various EU policy areas such as
employment, but also climate change, digitalisation, health. This overarching strategy is
implemented through two of the main EU programmes supporting youth: Erasmus+ and the
European Solidarity Corps - both programmes aiming to support, engage, connect and
empower young people even more effectively, notably through mobility and cooperation
activities.
9
The use of multidisciplinary pedagogies (teaching of science in political, environmental, socio-economic, and
cultural contexts) is a powerful vehicle for making STEM subjects and careers more attractive. This is also
known as the STEAM approach to science education and embraces the creative potential of connecting STEM
education with the arts, the humanities, and the social sciences.
10
Decision (EU) 2021/2316 of the European Parliament and of the Council on a European Year of Youth (2022),
OJ L 462, 22.12.2021, p.1
11
OJ C 456, 18.12.2018, p.1
9
In this respect, the EU seeks to help eliminate obstacles to youth cross-border volunteering in
Europe by raising awareness, increasing the capacity to offer volunteering opportunities,
reducing barriers to participation especially for disadvantaged groups and increasing the
recognition of skills gained. The Council Recommendation of 20 November 200812 sets out
the current framework for this and, upon the Council’s invitation, the Commission will put
forward a proposal for an update of the 2008 Recommendation to take into account
developments since then.
The Resolution on a strategic framework for European cooperation in education and
training towards the European Education Area and beyond (2021-2030) sets out a framework
to enable cooperation with Member States and engagement with relevant stakeholders,
including a reporting and analysis structure, with education targets to encourage and track
reforms in education and training, in order to achieve the European Education Area by 2025.
The European Skills Agenda13 aims to support people to develop the skills needed to take
full advantage of the opportunities provided by the green and digital transitions. The Skills
Agenda covers several building blocks for which Erasmus+ will be instrumental i.e. the “Pact
for Skills” will mobilise and incentivise relevant private and public stakeholders to
partner up and take action for lifelong skills development; “Skills for a job” will support
skills strategies to promote skills in STEM, empower people to learn and facilitate lifelong
learning, skills recognition and support to mobility, as well as innovative approaches aimed to
unlock investment in skills. “Skills for Life” will support adult learning across all
environments for social inclusion, active citizenship and personal development beyond
working life.
The Action Plan implementing the European Pillar of Social Rights 14 of 4 March 2021, builds
upon the above mentioned instruments to address the need to invest in skills and education to
unlock new opportunities for all and considerably increase participation in learning.
The EU Work Plan for Sport15 sets out guiding objectives in this field for the period 2021 to
2024, in particular as it comes to protecting integrity and values in sport, to promoting the
socio-economic and environmental dimensions of sport, and to fostering the participation in
sport and health-enhancing physical activity. The rollout of this Work Plan is supported as
appropriate by the sport strand of the Erasmus+ programme. In the same vein, the initiative
HealthyLifestyle4All (launched in 2021) will support the EU sport policy priorities, while
adding a new dimension. The initiative intends to link sport and active lifestyles with health,
food and other EU policies in a holistic approach aimed at promoting well-being.
Inclusive Erasmus+
12
Council recommendation of 20 November 2008 on the mobility of young volunteers across the European
Union. OJ C 319, 13.12.2008, p. 8
13
COM(2020)274.
14
Cf. https://ec.europa.eu/info/european-pillar-social-rights/european-pillar-social-rights-action-plan_en/.
15
Resolution of the Council and of the Representatives of the Governments of the Member States meeting within
the Council on the European Union Work Plan for Sport (1 January 2021-30 June 2024). OJ C 419, 4.12.2020, p.
1
10
The political guidelines of President von der Leyen highlighted the EU’s objectives on
equality: “A prosperous and social Europe depends on us all. We need equality for all and
equality in all of its senses”.
Within this context, a Commission implementing decision adopted in October 2021 outlines
general measures to be implemented over the 7-year period for the Erasmus+ programme and
the European Solidarity Corps16 and a strategy for inclusion and diversity17 covering all fields
of the programmes has been devised to increase the qualitative impact of the programme
actions and to ensure equal opportunities by reaching out more and better to people with
fewer opportunities, including people of different ages and from diverse cultural, social and
economic backgrounds, people with disabilities and migrants, as well as people living in
remote areas, such as in the EU outermost regions18.
The programme will offer more mobility opportunities to learners in school classes, in higher
education, vocational education and training, in adult education and training, young people,
youth workers and sport organisations, reaching out to new and more diverse groups of
learners. More diversified learning and training formats (e.g. more short-term, group mobility,
virtual learning and blended activities) will offer enhanced flexibility to the needs of staff and
learners who face obstacles in participation.
The programme will also support small-scale partnerships and youth participation activities to
widen its accessibility for grassroots organisations, which typically work directly with people
with fewer opportunities, Furthermore, simplification measures – such as the extended use of
simplified grant and the reinforced use of mobility accreditation processes (Charters) - will
enhance the inclusiveness and accessibility of the programme in all its fields.
Green Erasmus+
16
https://erasmus-plus.ec.europa.eu/document/commission-decision-framework-inclusion-2021-27
17
https://ec.europa.eu/programmes/erasmus-plus/resources/implementation-guidelines-erasmus-and-european-
solidarity-corps-inclusion-and-diversity_en
18
These regions are in the most remote parts of the EU, located in the Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean basin,
South America and the Indian Ocean. Article 349 TFEU provides for positive discrimination towards these
regions including specific measures to help these regions address the major challenges they face.
11
The European Commission launched in October 2020 the New European Bauhaus 19 with the
ambition to help make the Green Deal a cultural, human-centred positive and tangible
experience, and calls on all Europeans to imagine and build together a sustainable and
inclusive future. Through its broad lifelong learning dimension and cross-disciplinary
collaborative approaches across the sectors, Erasmus+ will contribute to equipping Europeans
with the necessary skills and developing innovative practices to bring about change.
Climate change is also a key priority for the young generation. According to a 2019
Eurobarometer survey on “How we build a stronger, more united Europe: the views of young
people”, protecting the environment and fighting climate change should be a top priority for
the EU. Young people made it also clear when devising the European youth goals in the EU
Youth dialogue process in 2018 i.e. “Sustainable Green Europe aims to achieve a society in
which all young people are environmentally active, educated and able to make a difference in
their everyday lives”.
Within this context, the programme can help develop knowledge, skills and attitudes on
climate change and sustainable development and support whole-institution approaches to
education for environmental sustainability. Erasmus+ will increase the number of mobility
opportunities in green forward-looking fields, i.e. those study periods abroad, traineeships,
youth or classrooms exchanges, etc. which foster the development of competences, enhance
career prospects and engage participants in subject areas which are strategic for the
sustainable growth of our planet, with special attention to areas such as rural development,
sustainable farming, management of natural resources, soil protection, bio agriculture, healthy
oceans.
Environment and fight against global warming will be a horizontal priority for the selection of
projects. Among other elements, the programme will also deliver on the so-called ‘Blue
Erasmus+’ dimension, notably with project results and knowledge creation, including
analyses and best practices relevant for the objective of preserving healthy oceans, seas,
coastal and inland waters.
Projects will support the creation of networks and partnerships of various actors in the field of
education and training, youth and sport, including schools, higher education institutions and
the local communities and industries. These actors will be able to work together on projects
promoting awareness, understanding and behaviour change related to sustainability, climate
crisis, biodiversity loss and related issues. This will not only involve learning and
understanding of these issues, but also practicing what is taught (for example social
responsibility; waste reduction; sustainable transport etc.). Young people and NGOs are
expected to play a significant role as agents of change and co-creators of project ideas.
Platforms such as eTwinning, the School Education Gateway (to be merged in 2022), and
EPALE will continue to produce support materials and facilitate the exchange of effective
educational practices and policies on environmental and sustainability matters. Erasmus+ is
also a powerful instrument to reach out to and engage with a wide spectrum of players in our
society (schools, higher education institutions, VET providers, youth and sport organisations,
NGOs, local and regional authorities, civil society organisations, etc.). Moreover, Erasmus+,
with mobility at its core, should strive for carbon-neutrality by promoting sustainable
transport modes and more responsible behaviour. Activities such as DiscoverEU are leading
by example, promoting environmental sustainability, offering activities (including
opportunities to participate in initiatives outside the programme, such as for instance the 3
billion Tree Planting pledge) and learning opportunities.
Digital Erasmus+
19
COM(2021) 573 final
12
In close alignment with the Digital Education Action Plan’s two strategic priorities,
developing a high performing digital education ecosystem and enhancing digital skills and
competences for the digital transformation, Erasmus+ will continue to be mobilised to
respond to the necessary digital transformation of education and training, youth and sport. The
programme aims to foster the development of digital skills and competences; support digital
transformation plans of education institutions in their efforts to manage an effective shift
towards digital education; support the purposeful use of digital technologies for teaching,
learning, assessment and engagement; foster teachers’ capacity to use digital tools and digital
education content in their learning design, including in blended learning approaches; develop
accessible and high quality digital learning; and improve exchange and cooperation in digital
education at the EU level through the Digital Education Hub.
In order to support the digital transformation of education and training, youth and sport, as
well as to provide more inclusive formats to participants who cannot take part in typical long-
term mobility periods, the programme will complement physical mobility under Erasmus+,
the latter remaining the core activity of Erasmus+, by continuing to promoting distance and
blended learning. Moreover, it will broaden and reinforce its offer of learning opportunities
focusing on basic and advanced digital competence development, virtual exchanges and
support digital education focused cooperation projects, also with priority regions
neighbouring the EU.
The cooperation projects will continue to support the development of innovative practices and
digital methods for education, vocational training and youth work. Flagship initiatives such as
the European Universities, the Centres for Vocational Excellence and the Erasmus+ Teacher
Academies, as well as the Digital Education Hub, will have a leading role in the digital
transformation of education and training systems. In addition, the Programme will continue to
increase long-standing support and investment in European online platforms for virtual
cooperation and digital education such as eTwinning and the School Education Gateway (to
be merged in 2022), EPALE, or the European Youth Portal to facilitate online mutual learning
between countries on system, institution and professional/individual development, including
for communities of practice in the area of youth work (development expected to start in
2022). The Programme will also help to further develop and adapt successful tools such as
SELFIE tool for whole school digital planning and the new SELFIE for Teachers, Europass or
the Youthpass. The programme implementation will be significantly digitalised, for instance
through initiatives such as the European Student Card (to be implemented initially in the field
of higher education), or a revamped IT architecture for beneficiaries and implementing
bodies. The European Student Card Initiative will further digitalise mobility management
processes and improve the efficiency and security of digital exchange of information.
20
COM/2017/0673 final
13
raise awareness of European common values (such as freedom, tolerance and non-
discrimination), as well as European history and culture.
The Regulation also emphasises the objective of encouraging the participation of young
people in Europe's democratic life; this can be achieved inter alia by supporting activities that
contribute to citizenship education and participation projects for young people.
The programme will continue to empower young people and to encourage their participation
in democratic life, particularly through the European Year of Youth in 2022.
Higher education
The Communication on achieving the European Education Area by 2025 sets higher
education as one of its core dimensions, and the Communication on a new ERA for Research
and Innovation calls for the further development of synergies between higher education and
research, building on the dual role of higher education institutions. The Commission will
work together with the higher education sector and Member States to co-create incentives for
an accelerated transformation of the higher education sector in Europe, in an open and
inclusive manner and with a focus on all its missions (education, research, innovation, service
to society). Such transformation will focus on values and democracy, connectivity among
higher education institutions and between them and other ecosystem actors, entrepreneurship,
inclusion, addressing digital and green readiness and resilience, innovation, openness to the
world and international competitiveness. Erasmus+ is instrumental to meeting these goals
through its support for policy cooperation among Member States, for ambitious and
innovative cooperation settings between higher education institutions and with their
knowledge ecosystems; as well as for evidence-building.
Within this context, a key contribution to the European Education Area is the continued
support through Erasmus+ of bottom-up alliances of higher education institutions to cooperate
seamlessly across borders and disciplines and in different languages. These ‘European
Universities’ will contribute to achieving a more united and stronger Europe and will
promote common EU values by bringing together a new generation of Europeans, able to
cooperate with different cultures, in different languages, and across borders and disciplines.
They will be instrumental in fostering stronger synergies between the European Education
Area, the European Research Area and the European Higher Education Area.
The European Education Area operates in synergy with the Bologna Process and the
European Research Area, inspiring and supporting other member countries of the European
Higher Education Area to benefit from a similar path. These objectives are fully aligned with
the Commission initiatives towards the European Education Area. Different strands of the
Erasmus+ programme will support these developments and their implementation at national
and institutional level throughout the Member States and third countries associated to the
programme. The programme will support the implementation of the objectives of these
initiatives through sectorial priorities under the partnerships for cooperation and policy
related actions.
As it was emphasised in the Communication on achieving the European Education Area by
2025, the Commission will explore options to help remove obstacles to effective transnational
cooperation between higher education institutions, including through a genuine European
Recognition and Quality Assurance System. This would ensure that external quality
assurance safeguards the autonomy of higher education institutions and at the same time
maintains public trust for automatic recognition for further learning within and across
14
Member States. Trust in each other’s education system is indispensable to achieve this
objective, which is built on transparent quality assurance systems and automatic recognition
of qualifications and learning periods abroad.
The European Student Card initiative, as a pillar of the European Education Area will
simplify, further digitalise, facilitate and boost student mobility in Europe, substantially
reducing the administrative burden in terms of time, expense and effort. The European
Student Card Initiative will improve the efficiency and security of digital exchange of
information. To maximise the benefits of the initiative and efficiency gains, the use of the
‘Erasmus without paper’ network and the digital procedures it enables shall become standard
for all participating higher education institutions.
The aim is to support the higher education sector in becoming even more inter-connected,
innovative, inclusive, green, digital, open to the world and competitive on the global
stage. For this purpose, the Programme will encourage much deeper and inter-disciplinary
cooperation between higher education institutions, as well as with their surrounding
innovation ecosystems, and the strengthening of links between education, research and
innovation, notably through the cooperation activities. The focus of the Erasmus+
programme will in particular be on strengthening inclusion, mobility, greening,
digitalisation, lifelong learning, quality assurance, fundamental academic values, data
tools for the European Education Area and automatic recognition21. The underlying
objective is to accelerate the transformation of the higher education sector throughout Europe,
in order to train the future generations in co-creating knowledge for a resilient, inclusive and
sustainable society and in finding innovative solutions to complex societal problems together,
as called by the New European Bauhaus. The latter being a creative and interdisciplinary
initiative, convening a space of encounter to recuperate and revisit sustainable practices, it can
empower the most inspiring practices, and help to design future ways of living.
In this regard, through its various actions relevant to the higher education field, in 2022, the
Programme will aim at:
Promoting inter-connected higher education systems: the programme will aim to
strengthen the strategic and structured cooperation between higher education institutions
through: a) support for developing and testing various types of cooperation models, including
virtual and blended cooperation and the use of different digital tools and online platforms; b)
improving mobility by implementing automatic mutual recognition of qualifications and
learning outcomes, and by embedding mobility in curricula; c) support for higher education
institutions to implement the Bologna principles, including promoting fundamental academic
values and the standards and guidelines for quality assurance, and tools to enhance mobility
for all; d) support for higher education institutions, in strong cooperation with the
representatives of Member States, to pilot the possible set-up of a legal statute for alliances of
higher education institutions - such as the European Universities, but also beyond; support the
experimentation of awarding a joint European degree label.
21
2018 Council Recommendation on promoting automatic mutual recognition of higher education and upper
secondary education and training qualifications and the outcomes of learning periods abroad OJ C 444,
10.12.2018, p. 1.
15
learning pathways and modular course design (part-time, online or blended) and appropriate
forms of assessment, including the development of online assessment; c) promoting the
lifelong learning dimension of higher education, including by exploring the possibilities for
take-up, validation and recognition of short learning courses leading to micro-credentials; d)
implementation of trans-disciplinary approaches and innovative pedagogies such as inverted
learning, collaborative online international learning, research-based learning and blended
intensive programmes, which support the acquisition of transferable forward-looking skills
and entrepreneurship through a challenge-based approach; e) development and
implementation of fit-for-purpose STEM higher education curricula, following a STEAM
approach; promoting participation of women in STEM fields of study, especially in
engineering, ICT and advanced digital skills; f) mainstreaming sustainable development in all
curricula for students in all disciplines and at all levels, including on the protection and
responsible use of resources for healthy oceans, seas coastal and inland waters, in the wider
scope of the Green Deal priorities.
Supporting green higher education systems, i.e. promoting education for environmental
sustainability and supporting the key role of higher education institutions in adapting
attitudes, perceptions, values and behaviour to live in a sustainable world, more respectful of
our planet. The programme will foster green education systems by a) supporting the
integration of education for environmental sustainability - including facing climate change
and protecting biodiversity- through a whole-institutional approach that integrates
sustainability into all programmes, disciplines and levels of higher education, b) promoting
transdisciplinary approaches coupled with a strong disciplinary background and life-long
learning, including through micro-credentials, c) support for up-to-date green skills and
curricula development in line with the required green skills.
Building inclusive higher education systems: The programme will foster inclusive
approaches for the mobility and cooperation activities such as a) increased access,
participation and completion rates of people with fewer opportunities, including
underrepresented groups, also through developing voluntary quantitative targets; b) active
support to incoming mobile participants throughout the process of finding accommodation,
including through collaboration with the relevant stakeholders for the provision of appropriate
and affordable housing; c) supporting the development of flexible career pathways between
education and research as well as support to mental health of students and academics; d)
foster gender balance in higher education institutions, across fields of study and in leadership
positions; e) fostering civic engagement through the promotion of informal learning and
extra-curricular activities and recognition of voluntary and community work in students’
academic results.
Supporting digital capabilities of the higher education sector through: a) the creation and
implementation of Digital Transformation Plans of higher education institutions; b)
16
development of digital skills and competences of students and staff, for example through
Digital Opportunity Traineeships (DOTs); c) the development of digital tools and
infrastructure for higher education institutions and their interoperability, especially in view of
cooperation between higher education institutions, d) consolidation and further development
of higher education data tools and data sources22 to monitor progress towards reaching the
objectives of the European Education Area and the Implementation of the European Strategy
for Universities, in particular by providing high quality data for indicators covering the four
missions of universities; e) supporting higher education institutions in the creation and
consolidation of their databases of graduates’ contact details, essential for the capacity
building of Member States’ graduate tracking systems in line with the 2017 Council
Recommendation on tracking graduates23.
School education
Principle 1 of the European Pillar of Social Rights24 stipulates that: ‘Everyone has the right
to quality and inclusive education, training and life-long learning in order to maintain and
acquire skills that enable them to participate fully in society and manage successfully
transitions in the labour market.’ Principle 11 states that: ‘Children have the right to
affordable early childhood education and care of good quality. Children have the right to
protection from poverty. Children from disadvantaged backgrounds have the right to specific
measures to enhance equal opportunities.’ The Council Resolution on further developing the
European Education Area to support future-oriented education and training systems25
recalls the ambitions expressed in the Council Conclusions on moving towards a vision of a
European Education Area26 that the area should be underpinned by the life-long learning
continuum, from early childhood education and care to school and vocational education and
training, to higher education and adult learning. The programme will support actions
promoting and fostering mobility and cooperation in education and training, and supporting
Member States in modernising their education and training systems, promoting teaching and
learning of languages, mutual recognition of qualifications and outcomes of learning periods
abroad.
The programme will implement the initiatives outlined in the Commission Communication on
Achieving the European Education Area by 202527 aimed at increasing quality and
inclusiveness of school education, promoting equity and outreach to people with fewer
opportunities, enhance competence and motivation of teachers, and help strengthen
understanding of climate change and sustainability.
22
For example: U-Multirank https://www.umultirank.org/; ETER https://www.eter-project.com/#/home;
Graduate Tracking https://www.eurograduate.eu/; Eurostudent https://www.eurostudent.eu/; HEInnovate
https://heinnovate.eu/en
23
OJ C 423, 9.12.2017, p. 1.
24
https://ec.europa.eu/commission/priorities/deeper-and-fairer-economic-and-monetary-union/european-pillar-
social-rights/european-pillar-social-rights-20-principles_en
25
https://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-13298-2019-INIT/en/pdf; 8 November 2019
26
https://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-9012-2018-INIT/en/pdf, 23 May 2018
27
https://ec.europa.eu/education/sites/education/files/document-library-docs/eea-communication-
sept2020_en.pdf; 30 September 2020.
17
The European online platforms for cooperation - eTwinning and the School Education
Gateway, which will be merged in the European School Education Platform in 2022, will
continue to make a significant contribution to system, school and professional development.
The new European Bauhaus initiative can also be a catalyst for contributions from the
school sector, in particular by building on interrelations among culture, art and science with a
view to helping to devise a more sustainable future through creativity and innovation.
The Council Conclusions on ‘European teachers and trainers for the future’28 of May
2020 recognise that teachers and trainers are an indispensable driving force of education and
training, and acknowledge their commitment during the COVID-19 crisis. The Programme is
instrumental to support the development of teachers’ and trainers’ competences, their
participation in continuous professional development and fostered wellbeing through
cooperation and mobility including the Digital Opportunity Traineeships (DOTs), as well as
their involvement in future policy design. The new SELFIE for Teachers tool will support
primary and secondary teachers to reflect on their digital competence and identify their
learning needs and areas for further development. Supporting passionate, positive, engaged,
ambitious and highly competent teachers who inspire learners to reach their full potential is
crucial to achieving the policy objectives enshrined in the European Education Area.
In this context, in 2022, the objective is to support actions that contribute to:
Tackling early school leaving, low basic skills proficiency and educational disadvantage,
enabling school success for all learners regardless of their personal situation and socio-
economic background, with a special focus on children at risk of underachievement and drop-
out (e.g. pupils with disabilities or with migrant background, ethnic minorities, from low-
educated families, or living in remote areas29), for example by: promoting whole-school
approaches to tacking underachievement and early leaving from education and training;
strengthening collaboration among all actors within schools, as well as with families and other
external stakeholders; improving transitions between different stages of education; fostering
monitoring, preventive and early intervention approaches; addressing well-being, mental
health, personal empowerment, including combatting bullying and harassment at school and
online; supporting networking of schools which promote collaborative and holistic
approaches to teaching and learning; developing strong quality assurance systems to achieve
high-quality inclusive education. This has become even more important in the context of the
COVID-19 crisis.
Developing high quality inclusive early childhood education and care systems (in line
with the ECEC Council Recommendation30), for example by: supporting initial and
continuing professional development of all staff involved in organising, leading and providing
early childhood education and care; creating, testing or implementing strategies and practices
to foster participation of all children in early childhood education and care, including children
in need of special support (e.g. children with fewer opportunities, including children with
disabilities, children from a migrant background, Roma children, etc…); promoting the
implementation of the EU quality framework for quality early childhood education and care.
18
(models of staff appraisal, assessment and feedback); enhancing teachers’ initial education,
induction, and continuous professional development and linking its different phases through
collaboration between teacher education providers; supporting the development of leadership
competences through specific professional development opportunities and promoting
distributed leadership; facilitating and significantly increasing teacher mobility, including by
overcoming remaining obstacles and developing a policy framework on teacher mobility;
supporting national administrations and stakeholders’ collaboration to develop innovative
approaches to teaching and learning, including assessment methods, for broad competence
development.
Reinforcing the development of a range of key competences (in line with the Council
Recommendation on Key Competences for Lifelong Learning31) for example by: promoting
cross-curricular collaboration; supporting innovation in teaching and learning approaches;
supporting the blend of different learning environments and tools, including digital tools;
supporting the creation and implementation of digital transformation plans of schools;
supporting cooperation between schools and stakeholders in local communities and abroad;
supporting system-wide collaboration in developing varied approaches to the assessment and
validation of key competences.
Promoting education for environmental sustainability, for example by (i) raising
awareness and prompting of concrete actions at both personal and societal levels for
addressing today's environmental challenges; (ii) developing the key competences
(knowledge, skills and attitudes) for climate change and sustainable development including
the underlying science of the challenges and their possible technological solutions; (iii)
strengthening the professional competences of teachers; (iv) testing of innovative practices to
prepare learners from early school ages and educational staff to become "agents for change"
(e.g. behavioural changes towards recycling, reduced consumption, and sustainable lifestyles);
and (v) supporting whole-school approaches to sustainability, as well as creativity and
innovation in line with the New European Bauhaus.
Promoting a comprehensive approach to language teaching and learning (in line with
the Council Recommendation on language teaching and learning32), building on the
increasing linguistic diversity in schools, for example by: promoting the concept by “language
aware schools”, valorising home languages, ultimately strengthening proficiency in the
language of schooling among pupils with diverse backgrounds, encouraging language
learning and awareness from early childhood education and care and in a lifelong learning
perspective; mainstreaming the use of new technologies to support language learning;
supporting the integration of the language dimension across the curricula; focusing on
reaching adequate competence levels by the end of compulsory education; developing
bilingual teaching options, especially for border regions and/or in areas where inhabitants use
more than one language 33.
Increasing the levels of achievement and interest in science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics (STEM). This priority will include, among others: promoting the development
of national STEM strategies; developing partnerships between schools, businesses, higher
education institutions, research institutions, and wider society; promoting effective and
innovative pedagogies and assessment; supporting girls interest in STEM and overcoming
31
OJ C 189, 4.6.2018, p. 1.
32
OJ C 189, 5.6.2019, p. 15.
33
In line with the Council Recommendation on a comprehensive approach to the teaching and learning of
languages {SWD(2018) 174 final} https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
content/EN/TXT/?uri=COM%3A2018%3A272%3AFIN
19
gender stereotypes in education and educational careers; promoting the STE(A)M approach to
education through interdisciplinary teaching of STEM in cultural, environmental, economic,
and other contexts, with the involvement of all academic disciplines.
Building capacity for promoting and facilitating recognition of learning periods abroad
(including follow-up to the Council Recommendation on automatic mutual recognition),
including promoting recognition of formal education and transversal competences developed
through non-formal and informal learning, for example by: building administrative capacity
of schools to support participation of pupils in transnational projects and peer exchanges,
including by pooling capacity of several schools through joint projects or projects led by local
and regional school authorities, coordination bodies and other organisations with a role in
school education; establishing sustainable partnerships between organisations setting cross-
border learning exchanges in general education; promoting embedded class exchanges or
pupil mobility in school programmes; ensuring appropriate safety standards for pupils
participating in transnational mobility; developing and disseminating tools and mechanisms
for the preparation, monitoring and recognition of periods abroad; and sharing and promoting
good practices.
34
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=uriserv:OJ.C_.2021.066.01.0001.01.ENG
35
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32020H1202(01)&from=EN
36
https://www.cedefop.europa.eu/files/osnabrueck_declaration_eu2020.pdf
37
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A32018H0502%2801%29
20
assurance of vocational education and training and to promote Centres of Vocational
Excellence (CoVE), as well as exploring the concept and use of micro-credentials, including
in VET, together with Member States and relevant stakeholders, including in the context of
the EQF Advisory Group, as proposed in the European Skills Agenda.
The CoVEs connect reference VET providers across Member States, foster cooperation,
including with stakeholders, and strive to develop high quality curricula and qualifications
focused on sectoral skills needs and societal challenges. They act as drivers of excellence and
innovation and promote a proactive role for VET in local and regional economic
development, including by seeking synergies with higher education institutions and jointly
contributing to the provision of the range of skills needed in our modern economies and
societies. The Centres will act as entrepreneurial incubators and catalysts for investment.
The Erasmus+ programme is the main source of EU funding that contributes to achieve the
target of 8% for learners benefiting from a mobility experience abroad as set in the Council
Recommendation on VET.
In the field of vocational education and training (both initial and continuing), actions
contributing to the following objectives linked to the Council Recommendation on VET and
the Osnabrück Declaration will be supported in 2022:
Agile VET, which adapts to labour market needs. This includes a) VET
programmes that offer a balanced mix of vocational including technical skills well
aligned to all economic cycles, evolving jobs and working methods and key
competences, including solid basic skills, digital, languages, transversal, green and
other life skills which provide strong foundations for resilience, lifelong learning,
lifelong employability, social inclusion, active citizenship and personal development;
b) VET curricula, programme offers and qualifications which are regularly updated,
building on skills intelligence (i.e. graduate tracking systems, skills anticipation
mechanisms, including at sectoral and regional levels); c) an appropriate degree of
autonomy of VET providers, flexibility, support and funding to adapt their training
offer to changing skills needs, green and digital transitions and economic cycles; d)
VET programme at all levels which comprise work-based learning components that
are further expanded also in continuing vocational education and training, and
complemented by appropriate support and measures to stabilise the offer of
apprenticeships and to address specific challenges of small companies to create work-
based learning opportunities in different sectors of the economy.
Flexible VET, which provides progression opportunities. This includes a) learner
centred VET programmes that offer access to face-to-face and digital or blended
learning, flexible and modular pathways based on the recognition of the outcomes of
non-formal and informal learning, and open up career and learning progression; b)
continuing vocational training programmes designed to be adaptable to labour market,
sectoral or individual up- or reskilling needs; and c) VET programmes which are
based on modules or units of learning outcomes and validation mechanisms allowing
the transfer, recognition and accumulation of individuals’ learning outcomes with a
view to gaining a qualification, a partial qualification, as relevant in the national
context. Actions will also aim to close existing gaps in the access to training for
working age adults, and at empowering them to successfully manage labour market
transitions.
VET driving innovation and growth, and preparing for the digital and green
transitions. This includes a) integration of VET into economic, industrial and
innovation strategies, including those linked to green and digital transitions; b)
expansion of the training offer fostering the acquisition of entrepreneurial, digital and
21
green skills; c) establishment of Centres of Vocational Excellence, which act as
catalysts for local business investment, supporting green and digital transitions,
European and regional innovation and smart specialisation strategies, development of
vocational education and training, including at higher qualification levels (European
Qualifications Framework for lifelong learning EQF levels 5-8), in line with national
context and provide innovative services such as clusters and business incubators for
start-ups and technology innovation for SMEs, as well as innovative reskilling
solutions for workers at risk of redundancy; and d) access to state-of-the-art
infrastructure, digitalisation strategies in line with national context and environmental
and social sustainability in VET programmes and organisational management, thus
contributing to the implementation of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
VET as an attractive choice based on modern and digitalised provision of
training/skills. This includes a) permeability between both initial and continuing
vocational education and training, general education and higher education; b)
development of VET at EQF levels 5 to 8; c) delivery based on a mix of open, digital
and participative learning environments, including learning conducive workplaces
supported by state-of-the-art and accessible infrastructure, equipment and technology,
and accompanied by versatile pedagogies and tools (e.g. ICT based simulators, virtual
and augmented reality); d) initial and continuing professional development of VET
teachers and trainers and the creation and implementation of digital transformation
plans of VET institutions to foster technical and digital skills and effective innovative
training methods, including teaching in virtual environment, in line with state of the
art vocational and digital pedagogy, work with digital learning tools, and in diverse
and multicultural environments; e) internationalisation strategies supporting a strategic
approach to international cooperation in VET, including the preparation, training and
participation of VET learners and staff in international, national, regional and sectoral
skills competitions; f) Opportunities for learning mobility of vocational learners and
staff, including through the Digital Opportunity Traineeships (DOT), virtual mobility,
long-duration mobility and mobility to third countries not associated to the programme
are in place, facilitated by the use and recognition of units of learning outcomes and of
relevant European tools (Memorandum of Understanding and the Learning
Agreement); and g) high quality lifelong learning and career guidance services,
making full use of Europass and other digital services.
VET that promotes equal opportunities. This includes a) inclusive and accessible
programmes for marginalised and vulnerable groups, such as people with disabilities,
low-qualified/skilled persons, minorities, people with migrant background and people
with fewer opportunities because of their geographical location such as people living
in remote areas and/or their social-economically disadvantaged situation; b) targeted
measures and flexible training formats prevent early leaving from education and
training and support the school-to-work transition; c) programmes accessible through
digital learning platforms, supported by tools, devices and internet connection, in
particular for marginalised or vulnerable groups and people in rural or remote areas;
and d) targeted measures promoting gender balance in traditionally “male” or
“female” professions and address gender and other stereotypes.
VET underpinned by a culture of quality assurance. This includes further
development of national quality assurance systems, for both initial and continuing
VET, in all learning environments (such as school-based provision and work-based
learning, including apprenticeship schemes) and all learning types (digital, face-to-
face or blended), delivered by both public and private providers, underpinned by a set
of indicative descriptors and common reference indicators for quality assurance in
vocational education and training applied both at system and provider level as defined
in Annex II of the Council Recommendation on VET.
22
Actions to boost quality assurance in VET through a reinforcement of the European
Quality Assurance in Vocational Education and Training EQAVET Framework, by
exploring EU vocational core profiles, and the potential role of micro-credentials. The
Programme will also contribute to the achievement of the three quantitative objectives
defined in the Council Recommendation on VET.
Adult education
In the adult education field, in line with the quality objectives of the European Skills Agenda,
the European Education Area and the European Pillar of Social Rights Action Plan, as well as
with the recently adopted Council Resolution on a New European agenda for adult learning,
the Programme will contribute in 2022 – through mobility and cooperation actions – to
empowering individuals’ participation in inclusive education and training notably through
support for non-formal, lifelong learning and local/community learning, social fairness
reaching out to people of all backgrounds and in all geographical areas, urban or rural,
including older adults. The ‘Skills for Life’ action is aimed at supporting people
independently of their age, background or status, developing the skills and capacity to adapt
and manage change in all aspects of their lives, skills to progress at work, navigate job
transitions and remain employable, and at closing existing gaps in the access to training for
working age adults. The action of the European Skills Agenda on the ‘Initiative on the
individual learning accounts’ perceives direct incentives for people to train, such as individual
learning accounts, as a tool which can make lifelong learning a reality. They can help
individuals to adapt to evolving skills needs in a job, or to change occupation or sector. The
European Skills Agenda also sets a target of 50% for adult participation in learning 38 (with
dedicated targets for the unemployed and the low-qualified) and of 70% of the adult
population in the EU with at least basic digital skills by 2025. The Council Resolution on a
strategic framework for European cooperation in education and training towards the European
Education Area and beyond (2021-2030) indicates that at least 47% of adults aged 25-64
should have participated in learning during the last 12 months, by 2025. Consistently, the
European Pillar of Social Rights Action Plan envisages that by 2030 adult participation in
learning should reach 60%, a target endorsed by Heads of State and Government in the Porto
Social Summit of 7 May 2021. In line with these targets, the Council Resolution on a new
European agenda for adult learning 2021-2030 (NEAAL 2030) adopted by the Council on 29
November 2021, has the overall objective to increase and improve the provision, promotion
and take-up of formal, non-formal and informal learning opportunities for all. The NEAAL
2030’s main priorities areas are: governance, supply and take-up of lifelong learning
opportunities, accessibility and flexibility, quality, equity, inclusion and success in adult
learning, the green and digital transitions.
38
The Council Resolution of February 2021 on a strategic framework for European cooperation in education and
training sets the 2025 target at 47% of adults participating in learning.
39
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=OJ:JOC_2016_484_R_0001
23
Beyond basic skills, the partnerships within the ‘Pact for Skills’, an action of the European
Skills Agenda, will have adult upskilling and reskilling as their main focus.
In the field of adult education, the following objectives should be pursued in 2022:
The development and provision of skills for life and non-formal learning in
cooperation with local learning centres, libraries, cultural centres, NGOs, etc.
The creation and implementation of digital transformation plans of adult learning
institutions.
The setup or enlarging of an access to upskilling pathways for adults with a low level
of skills, knowledge and competences allowing them to enhance their literacy,
numeracy and digital competences, as well as other key competences, and to progress
towards higher qualifications, including through skills identification and screening or
tailored learning offers.
Empowering and enabling adults to participate in training in order to reduce
skills gaps and labour market shortages, in particular through individual learning
accounts, complemented by the provision of enabling services. This should include
guidance, validation, recognition (including through micro-credentials), transparency
of the quality of training opportunities and educational leave arrangements.
Improving and extending the supply of high quality learning opportunities for
adults by making available flexible learning offers adapted to their learning needs
(e.g. blended learning, digital learning applications), and by the validation of skills
acquired through informal and non-formal learning.
Increasing learning demand and take-up through effective outreach, guidance and
motivation strategies that support and encourage low-skilled and/or low-qualified
adults, migrants, seniors and people with disabilities or social disadvantages;
developing guidance as a service to ensure that adults have access to relevant learning
throughout life.
Extending and developing the competences of educators and teachers and other
personnel who support adult learners, in particular in developing their skills to
recognise and respond to individual learning needs e.g. designing tailored paths or
plans adapted to learner background and circumstances; develop the digital
competences of educators, e.g. through the Digital Opportunity Traineeships (DOTs)
and improve teaching methods and tools through effective use of innovative solutions
and digital technologies.
Developing mechanisms to monitor the effectiveness and improve quality assurance
of adult learning policies and provision, and to track the progress of adult learners.
Creating and promoting learning opportunities among all citizens and generations,
including intergenerational learning, with a view to building better understanding of
the European Union and its values, and adding solidity to the European identity.
Youth
In line with the EU Youth Strategy, the Erasmus+ actions supported in 2022 under the Youth
strand also contribute to the implementation of the Council Resolution on the Framework
for establishing a European Youth Work Agenda. Through the Erasmus+ accreditation
system in the field of youth, the Programme will facilitate cross-border exchanges for young
people and youth workers (in certain cases beyond the EU), and cooperation, build capacity of
organisations and overall foster quality development of youth work, including through the
24
implementation of the European Youth Work Agenda and the Bonn Process 40, and the
definition of common skills. Through promotion of education and training of youth workers
and non-vocational qualifications for youth work, the programme will also encourage the
mobility of youth workers within the EU. Erasmus+ will support new types of actions such as
the Youth participation activities and DiscoverEU that aim to enhance the focus on
empowering young people, fostering their active participation in the society and supporting
their personal and professional development.
In this respect, the EU seeks to help eliminate obstacles to volunteering in Europe by raising
awareness, increasing the capacity to offer volunteering opportunities, reducing barriers to
participation especially for disadvantaged groups and increasing the recognition of skills
gained. The Council Recommendation of 20 November 200841 sets out the current
framework for this and, upon the Council’s invitation, the Commission will put forward a
proposal for an update of the 2008 Recommendation to take into account developments since
then.
Also in line with the EU Youth strategy and the proposed European Year of Youth, the
programme will promote projects aiming at engaging, connecting and empowering young
people: priority will be given to strengthening cross-sectorial cooperation, allowing for
greater synergies across different areas of actions that matter for young people. A special
focus will be put on participation – including alternative and innovative forms of participation
–and active citizenship of young people, notably those that involve youth at risk of social
exclusion and discrimination and those living in remote regions where there are few
educational possibilities. Against this background, the programme will help to:
Engage
Enhance the participation of all young people in democratic and civic life in Europe;
Enable young people to connect with, express their views and be heard by elected
policy-makers, public administrations, interest groups, civil society organisations or
individuals active in political or social processes affecting their lives;
Enhance critical thinking and media literacy among young people to strengthen
democracy and counter manipulation, propaganda and disinformation;
Broaden and deepen political, civic and social participation of young people at local,
regional, national, European or global level, including encouraging participation in,
synergies and exchanges with national civil service schemes.
Connect
Foster active citizenship and notably volunteering and solidarity among young people;
Increase social inclusion of all young people, building on EU values;
Promote intercultural dialogue and promote knowledge about and acceptance of
diversity and tolerance in society;
Strengthen young people's sense of initiative, notably in the social field and to support
their communities, including to help reimagine how to live better together after the
pandemic, by building on their willingness to participate in policies relevant to build a
more sustainable future and also on their creativity, building on the European Green
Deal;
Promote entrepreneurship, creative learning and social entrepreneurship among young
people;
Reinforce links between policy, research and practice and promote better knowledge
40
The Bonn Process is the joint effort to implement the European Youth Work Agenda:
https://www.eywc2020.eu/en/agenda/bonn-process
41
OJ C 319, 13.12.2008, p. 8
25
about the situation of young people and youth policies.
Empower
Contribute to quality and innovation in youth work and its recognition, in line with the
priorities enshrined in the European Youth Work Agenda and the December 2020
Bonn Declaration;
Contribute to the quality of education and training and of non-vocational qualifications
for youth workers and support projects in developing and sharing methods in order to
contribute to the European Education Area;
Support capacity-building of youth workers and youth work practices, whether they
are digital or face-to-face;
Support youth workers in developing and sharing effective methods in reaching out to
marginalised young people, in preventing racism and intolerance among youth, and in
addressing the risks, opportunities, and implications of digitalisation;
Foster the inclusion and employability of young people with fewer opportunities
(including for persons not in education, employment or training), with particular
emphasis in young people at risk of marginalisation and those with a migrant
background, as well as those living in remote areas;
Open up youth work to cross-sectoral cooperation allowing greater synergies across all
areas of actions that address the concerns of young people;
Ease transition of young people from youth to adulthood, including supporting the
integration into the labour market by addressing key competences and other
organisational support that youth work can bring;
Promote recognition and validation of youth work and informal and non-formal
learning at European, national, regional and local levels.
Sport
The fourth EU Work Plan for Sport sets the basis for intense cooperation in three priority
areas: the integrity and the values of sport, the socio-economic and environmental dimensions
of sport, and promotion of sport and physical activity. This includes in 2022 actions related to
governance, education, inclusion, gender equality, sport for all generations, green and
sustainable sport.
The priority of sport actions will continue to be grassroots sport, increased participation in
sport and awareness of the importance of health-enhancing physical activity. Building on the
success of the Tartu Call for a Healthy Life Style, the initiative HealthyLifestyle4All launched
by Commissioner Mariya Gabriel in September 202142 will further strengthen cross-sectoral
cooperation to promote healthy lifestyles. The HealthyLifestyle4All initiative, through its
three pillars is devoted to 1) raising awareness on healthy lifestyles, 2) having a better access
to sport and physical activity and 3) creating a holistic approach to food, health and sport in
youth, one of its key target audiences. The results of this initiative will help to further support
the European Year of Youth.
In 2022, the Erasmus+ programme will continue to promote participation in sport and
physical activity and will put emphasis on grassroots sport, with a view to ensuring increased
participation of small-sized organisations.
The sport actions will continue to support initiatives that tackle cross-border threats to the
integrity of sport, such as doping, match fixing and violence, as well as all kinds of
42
https://ec.europa.eu/sport/news/healthylifestyle4all-campaign-launch_en
26
intolerance, harassment and discrimination and activities leading to or related to violent
extremism. It will also promote and support good governance in sport and dual careers of
athletes and voluntary activities in sport, together with social inclusion, including of refugees
and migrants. The implementation of the Erasmus+ sport actions will continue to assist
sporting organisations and clubs to recover from the COVID-19 crisis. Continuity will be
ensured in the support of the European Week of Sport and the implementation of EU
guidelines (EU Physical Activity Guidelines and EU Guidelines on Dual Careers of Athletes).
Social inclusion, promotion of good governance principles and the fight against violence and
intolerance in sport will also be a major focus within the Sport actions in 2022.
The European Week of Sport will be used to raise awareness of the need to practice sport and
physical activity, including for health reasons. The annual EU Sport Forum will continue to
be a unique opportunity for sport organisations to meet and discuss key topics in the field of
sport with policy makers, representatives of EU institutions, and Member States.
In addition the SHARE (SportHub: Alliance for Regional development in Europe) initiative
will continue to promote the role of sport and physical activity as an instrument for economic
social and cultural development towards more healthy and active communities, and enabling
spaces for healthy lifestyles, for instance in the context of the New European Bauhaus.
The #Beinclusive EU sport awards will once again recognise sport organisations working
with ethnic minorities, refugees, people with disabilities, youth groups at risk, or other groups
that face challenging social circumstances. A new gala of the #BeActive awards will be
organised in 2022 and will see the addition of the #BeActive Across Generations Award in
support of the HealthyLifestyle4All initiative.
The programme will continue to support evidence-based policy in the field of sport. Two
groups of experts in the fields of Green Sport and Strengthening the recovery and the crisis
resilience of the sport sector during and in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic will
support the Sport actions. In addition, a High Level Group on Gender Equality in Sport is
tasked with creating concrete measures to ensure equal opportunities in sport, within the
framework of the EU Gender Equality Strategy 2021-2025.
Enhancing the international dimension of education and training, youth and sports in third
countries not associated to the programme promotes the Union's action globally, the EU
external action objectives, geopolitical priorities and principles. In line with the 9 April 2019
Council Conclusions 'Towards an ever more sustainable Union by 2030'43, education, the
development of knowledge and skills, as well as the development of a sense of responsibility
for a more sustainable world, environmental protection and global citizenship are key drivers
for sustainable development. Erasmus+ is therefore an important catalyst for achieving all
Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) and in particular SDG 4 aiming to ‘ensure inclusive
and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all', and
leaving 'no one behind', contributing to the EU's commitment to the 2030 Agenda for
43
https://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-8286-2019-INIT/en/pdf
27
Sustainable Development44. This commitment is all the more important in the context of the
COVID-19 crisis, which has already impaired the progress made in the last years.
The programme offers a strong international dimension supporting the external dimension of
internal policies and the EU’s external priorities. It strengthens societal links through
enhanced mobility and education exchanges and capacity building, nurturing social resilience,
human development, employability, active participation and ensuring regular channels for
people-to-people cooperation and connectivity worldwide and to build a positive image of
Europe in the world, spreading its fundamental values, thus also facilitating EU policy
dialogue and public diplomacy actions. In addition to the mobility of individuals between
higher education institutions in associated and not associated countries, outgoing mobility
towards third countries not associated to the programme of VET learners and VET staff, and
dedicated scholarships for excellent students worldwide, the programme also supports
capacity building actions in higher education, vocational education and training, youth and
sports. These activities will offer a response to the challenges of quality, modernisation and
employability through increased relevance and responsiveness of education for a green and
sustainable socio-economic growth and prosperity in third countries not associated to the
programme. Exchange, cooperation and dialogue in the field of youth and non-formal
learning will be supported as a driver of sustainable socio-economic development and well-
being of young people, as well as intercultural dialogue and soft skills development through
virtual exchanges. Support will also be available for sport activities and policies as a vehicle
to promote values, the personal and social development of individuals and to build more
cohesive communities. Erasmus+ will ensure coherence and synergies with the priorities and
support in the education sector that the EU conducts in the third countries not associated to
the programme. On operational level, actions under Erasmus+ activities will seek
complementarity with ongoing bilateral policy dialogue and support to structural reforms
through the EU’s financial and technical international cooperation as well as with Member
States activities in the field.
Jean Monnet
Jean Monnet activities continue to bring important contributions to the reflections on the
future of Europe by promoting excellence in teaching and research in the field of European
studies, in Europe and worldwide. Jean Monnet actions represent a very effective EU Public
Diplomacy tool.
Jean Monnet actions enhance understanding and foster knowledge and awareness about EU
matters and policies through increased opportunities for teaching, learning and debating, both
at higher education and general education and training levels, while improving the quality of
teaching and professional training on EU subjects. Jean Monnet activities also foster the
dialogue between the academic world and policy-makers to enhance governance of EU
policies.
The Jean Monnet action also supports activities in other fields of education and training
(schools and vocational education and training), aiming to diversify and mainstream EU-
related subjects in study programmes, to raise awareness and exchange views, as well as to
develop relevant content and innovative tools.
The Jean Monnet action will continue the support to the designated institutions pursuing an
aim of European interest, as identified in the legal basis, providing high quality service e.g.
44
https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/21252030%20Agenda%20for%20Sustainable%20D
evelopment%20web.pdf
28
research for preparing future policies, teaching, dissemination of results and general
information for the broad public.
The European economy has faced a profound and unprecedented shock with the COVID-19
pandemic, putting a serious strain on the economy, labour market, social, health and education
and training systems of Member States. Facing this challenge, the Union took strong action to
recover from the health, social and economic shock. Direct and indirect effects of the
pandemic have severely impacted all Member States’ education and training systems and
youth and sport policies. The pandemic has increased levels of social and territorial
inequalities and severely disrupted education and training provision, and limited drastically
the opportunities for youth and sport activities, in particular for the athletes. Consequences of
the pandemic on young people and on the youth sector underlined the importance to reflect on
the role of democracy in our society and highlighted the key role of civic education, media
literacy, digital youth work and awareness of disinformation to promote active participation
and engagement of the young. The massive shift towards online education and digital youth
work emphasized the need for quick reforms, capacity-building, teacher and youth workers
training, skills development, new pedagogies and further transnational cooperation in quality
assurance, but also to prepare for the future and increase digital readiness. The vital role of
digitalisation became abundantly clear in preserving uninterrupted and fair access to quality
education, in enabling educators to minimise disruption and ensuring the continuity of
assessment and examination.
The pandemic has been an unprecedented stress test for the Erasmus+ programme in terms of
resilience and business continuity. In 2022, the programme will therefore continue investing
in mobility and cooperation in education and training, youth and sport, to foster skills and
competences development necessary for the twin transitions.
In 2022, Erasmus+ remains true to its long standing mission to support transnational
learning mobility. By boosting budgetary appropriations towards Key Action 1, the
programme stands ready to cater for a possible resumption of demand for cross-border
activities (as long as the lifting or attenuation of travel restrictions will result in more
conducive conditions for transnational mobility), Erasmus+ will also keep providing vital
support to partnerships for cooperation projects, and to policy development in Member
States, thereby accelerating structural reforms. The programme will help drive systemic
impact in mainstreaming innovative policies and accelerating new practices that improve the
quality and relevance of education, training and youth systems throughout Europe, at national,
regional and local level.
The Erasmus+ resilience effort will mobilise hundreds of thousands of schools, higher
education institutions, vocational training institutes, teachers, young people, youth and sport
organisations, civil society and other stakeholders. Partnerships and exchanges (virtual and
physical) across Europe will provide the basis for (re)connecting across Europe and working
together on the most practical and innovative solutions. The programme will contribute to
closing the education gap between affluent and disadvantaged regions and learners, fostering
equality, including gender equality, entrepreneurship, empowering both young people and
adults of all backgrounds with the knowledge, skills and attitudes they need for employment,
social integration and active citizenship.
29
This concrete response of the Erasmus+ programme will contribute to mitigating the
socio-economic and educational consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic, while preparing
Europe's future in the spirit of solidarity among its people.
30
Inclusion and solidarity. These are key ingredients in supporting a full economic and
social development in Europe, addressing the effects of the crisis on the most
vulnerable groups of learners and young people, and bringing back a sense of
European cohesion and solidarity between citizens. The crisis has exacerbated the
digital and social divide, exposing structural inequality between learners, between
countries and regions. The strong socio-economic bias that the crisis has revealed in
the delivery of distance and online learning has shown how important it is to invest in
learning opportunities for all, in initiatives to support educational equity for
people with fewer opportunities and in intergenerational projects. Ensuring full
participation of young people in education and training, youth and sports, regardless of
their socio-economic background, their personal situation or their country or region of
residence, is of paramount importance. Education, training, youth and sport activities
of the programme are all powerful tools to promote inclusion and foster equality. It
would be unforgivable in the eyes of the European public opinion if at a moment when
the social inclusion gap is visibly widening and there is a call to act, the EU would
scale down its ambitions for social inclusivity, its support to young people who have
typically been hardest hit by the crisis. Erasmus+ in particular, as a flagship Union’s
programme, will increase participation rates among people with fewer
opportunities through more flexible and simple participation formats, more help
prepare and accompany participants in their Erasmus+ mobilities, financial support for
those who would need it. A gender equality perspective will be mainstreamed
throughout the programme, in line with the principles of the Gender Equality Strategy
2020-2545.
Driving innovation and entrepreneurship. Europe needs more investments in
forward-looking study fields relevant for the restart after the pandemic crisis, such
as climate change, advanced digital skills, clean energy, artificial intelligence, data
analysis, health sciences, etc. These are all essential fields for Europe's future
sustainable growth and cohesion, and areas in which Europe needs to develop a
pipeline of new talents to grow and develop to achieve a sustainable development
path, looking at our green and digital challenges as opportunities to transform our lives
for the better.
Focused mobility and cooperation actions will help the Union unleash its
potential for innovation, creativity and entrepreneurship in the digital economy.
The Erasmus+ programme, with is lifelong learning continuum, is therefore an
excellent instrument to boost learning at all levels (for example though targeted
mobility and traineeships in forward-looking study fields, as well as the new
partnerships for innovation and for excellence), a role that has become more
relevant than ever. By supporting Erasmus+ Teachers’ Academies, the programme
will be used to pool expertise in teacher education and provide teachers with learning
opportunities, in particular on digital learning, and inclusion of pupils with fewer
opportunities, including those with special needs. Ambitious initiatives like the
European Universities initiative, which aim to change the landscape of higher
education in Europe, including by mobilising higher education instititutions’
preparedness and resilience for remote learning, will strongly contribute to the post-
COVID-19 scenario, innovation and entrepreneurship. Centres of Vocational
Excellence will have similar effect on skills development. The new Partnerships for
Innovation will setup innovative approaches to provide tomorrow’s workers with the
appropriate skills for rapidly-changing labour markets, and arm tomorrow’s workforce
with creativity, skills and entrepreneurship to confront the growing complexity of
45
https://ec.europa.eu/info/policies/justice-and-fundamental-rights/gender-equality/gender-equality-strategy_en
31
societal challenges while contributing to building a more sustainable and inclusive
future.
Involving young people in the reconnecting across Europe. A focus on young
people, their living conditions, their health and wellbeing, and their active
participation in democratic society is absolutely necessary in the coming years.
Involving, supporting and stimulating young people, youth workers and youth
organisations to engage in European cooperation (and beyond) is, more than ever,
of very high importance. Erasmus+ mobility and cooperation projects in the field of
youth actively engage young people, youth workers and civil society organisations at
large and enable them to play an effective role, so that they have more opportunities to
take part in participatory processes such as the Conference on the Future of Europe
and help shaping their future. The action of the Union will reflect this need and keep
on investing in Erasmus+ to multiply the opportunities of exchange and
cooperation between young people across Europe and beyond, for example
through the new Youth participation activities that aim to help young people engage
and learn to participate in democratic life, raising awareness about European Union
common values and fundamental rights, bringing together young people and decision
makers at local, national and European level.
The Budgetary Authority approved a 5 million Euro worth reinforcement to the Erasmus+
programme under the EU budget 2022 procedure.
The addition earmarked by the budgetary authority for the European Year of Youth will
mainly be devoted to support the national coordination of the Year and exceptionally increase
the support to youth networks (in particular the European Youth Forum). Additional budget is
foreseen to support activities of the Year for civil society organisations, national working
groups and information multipliers (such as Eurodesk), as well as communication and events.
The Year will also allow a reinforced budget to youth participation activities, youth mobility
and DiscoverEU, and will encourage participation of all young people, especially those with
fewer opportunities.
32
PART II - GRANTS, PROCUREMENTS AND OTHER ACTIONS
Basic act: Regulation (EU) 2021/817 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20
May 2021 establishing the 'Erasmus+': the Union programme for education,
training, youth and sport and repealing Regulation (EU) No 1288/2013
2. METHODS OF INTERVENTION
On the basis of the objectives given in the Erasmus+ Regulation, the 2022 Work Programme
will be implemented through:
Actions implemented through indirect management;
Actions implemented through direct management:
o Grants;
o Procurements;
o Experts;
o Other actions.
To achieve the objectives and policy priorities announced in Part I of this Work Programme,
general and specific calls for proposals will be published by the European Commission or by
the Executive Agency in accordance with Article 189 (1) of the Financial Regulation (FR).
Each year, after adoption of the financing decision, based on Article 110 of the FR, a General
Call for Proposals will be published. The General Call for Proposals for the implementation
of the Erasmus+ Programme makes reference to a Programme Guide for the practical
information. The Erasmus+ Programme Guide aims to assist all those interested in developing
projects within the Programme. It helps them understand the objectives and the actions of the
Programme. It also aims to give detailed information on what is needed in order to apply and
what level of grant is offered. Finally, it informs about the grant selection procedure as well as
the rules applying to successful applicants that become beneficiaries of an EU grant. The
Programme Guide provides also detailed information as regards the award criteria for each
call. The quality of the proposals will be assessed on the basis of the award criteria published
per action in the guide, as elaborated upon in the call for proposals.
Actions will be implemented both in direct and indirect management.
All actions implemented through the National Agencies (marked as NA), are to be considered
as indirect management. The Commission authorizes the recognition of the eligibility of costs
incurred from 1 January 2022. This retroactivity aims to ensure programme implementation
continuity.
Grants through direct management will be those awarded by EAC, EMPL or EACEA.
33
Some grants will also be awarded in direct management in accordance with indents (c), (d)
and (f) of Article 195 of the FR. With reference to Pillar Assessed International
Organisations, the Commission may entrust them budget implementation tasks via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)( c)(ii) and 156(1) of the FR.
The calls for proposals that will be launched with a view to selecting actions and work
programmes to be co-financed in 2022, as well as the grants awarded under specific
conditions without a call for proposals are specified further below in Part II of this Work
Programme.
The majority of grants will be financed in the form of lump sums, reimbursement on the basis
of unit costs and flat rate financing (simplified forms of grants). The use of these types of
grants under Erasmus+ Programme has been approved by a “Decision authorising the use of
lump sums and unit costs under the Erasmus+ Programme 2021 – 202746”. In accordance with
this Decision, the methodology used to establish the simplified forms of grants and their
levels ensures the respect of the principle of sound financing management and reasonable
compliance with the principles of co-financing and no double funding.
For all grants the open access requirement of the Erasmus+ programme applies. Any research
output must be made available online following open access publishing principles. Any
educational resources or software produced or modified must be made available online on
suitable platforms47 and under fully open licenses which allow free use, sharing and
modification. Justified exceptions are possible but must be requested and confirmed in
writing.
For the beneficiaries of all grants awarded under Erasmus+, the following selection criteria
will apply.
Organisations, institutions and groups applying for any grant under Erasmus+ as detailed
further below in Part II of this Work Programme will be assessed against the following
selection criteria:
Applicants must have stable and sufficient sources of funding to maintain their activity
throughout the period during which the action is being carried out and to participate in its
funding. The verification of the financial capacity does not apply to public bodies and
international organisations. According to Article 21 (3) of the Regulation, public bodies,
as well as schools, higher education institutions and organisations in the fields of
education, training, youth and sport that have received over 50% of their annual revenue
from public sources over the last two years shall be considered as having the necessary
financial, professional and administrative capacity to carry out activities under the
Programme. They shall not be required to present further documentation to demonstrate
that capacity.
Applicants must have the professional competences and qualifications required to
complete the proposed action.
b. PROCUREMENTS
This Work Programme also includes actions that will be implemented by public procurement
procedures (via calls for tenders or the use of framework contracts) (Title VII FR).
46
https://ec.europa.eu/info/funding-tenders/opportunities/docs/2021-2027/erasmus/guidance/ls-and-unit-cost-
decision_erasmus_en.pdf
47
Project results should be made available publicly on the Erasmus+ Project Results Platform
34
For actions implemented through framework contracts (FWC), in case existing FWC cannot
be used, the Commission will consider publishing calls for tender to award new FWC.
This Work Programme includes costs related to the experts involved in the assessment of
proposals and offers, in monitoring projects and in providing policy advice.
Accreditation processes are in place under certain actions in order to ensure the general
quality framework for European and international cooperation activities. Holding an
accreditation can be a pre-requisite to then be eligible to receive a grant for mobility projects
under Key Action 1 or to participate in other actions of the Programme.
The Programme will also award prizes.
Furthermore, the Programme finances activities in cooperation with the Joint Research Centre
(JRC) by means of specific administrative agreements. Wherever possible, preference will be
given to relying on the expertise of the JRC to create a better knowledge base and to
reinforcing the collection of evidence at EU level.
35
OBJECTIVES PURSUED AND EXPECTED RESULTS
Key Action 1
The Actions supported under the Key Action 1 are expected to bring positive and long-lasting
effects on the participants and participating organisations involved, as well as on the policy
systems in which such activities are framed.
As regards students, trainees, apprentices, adult learners, pupils and young people, the
mobility activities supported under this Key Action are meant to produce the main following
outcomes:
enhanced employability and improved career prospects;
increased sense of initiative and entrepreneurship;
increased self-empowerment and self-esteem;
increased social inclusion
improved key competences, including foreign language and digital competences,
enhanced intercultural awareness;
more active participation in democratic life and in society in general;
better awareness of the European project and the EU common values;
increased motivation for taking part in future (formal/non-formal) education or
training after the mobility period abroad.
As regards staff, youth workers and professionals involved in education, training and youth,
the mobility activities are expected to produce the following outcomes:
improved competences, linked to their professional profiles;
broader understanding of practices, policies and systems in education/learning,
training or youth across countries;
greater understanding of interconnections between formal and non-formal
education/learning, vocational training and the labour market respectively;
better quality of their work and activities in favour of students, trainees, apprentices,
pupils, adult learners and young people;
greater understanding and responsiveness to social, linguistic and cultural diversity;
increased ability to address the needs of people with fewer opportunities;
increased support for and promotion of mobility activities for learners;
increased opportunities for professional and career development;
improved key competences, including foreign language and digital competences;
increased motivation and satisfaction in their daily work.
In the long run, the combined effect of the several thousands of projects supported under Key
Action 1 is expected to have an impact on the education, training and youth systems in the
participating countries, thus stimulating policy reforms and attracting new resources for
mobility opportunities in Europe and beyond.
Key Action 2
Key Action 2 is expected to result in the development, transfer and/or implementation of
innovative practices at organisational, local, regional, national or European levels. For the
participating organisations, projects supported under this Key Action are intended to produce
the main following outcomes:
strengthened cooperation between organisations and institutions active in the fields of
education, training, youth and sport;
development of innovative and inclusive approaches in addressing and reaching out to
36
target groups of education, training, youth and sport policies;
increased participation of individuals with fewer opportunities in education, training,
youth and sport activities;
increased digital capacity and readiness of organisations and institutions and a more
strategic and integrated use of digital technologies through digital transformation plans of
education and training institutions;
increased support for the creation and use of high-quality digital education content and
relevant digital pedagogy methods and tools in education, training, youth and sport;
more modern, dynamic, committed and professional environments inside the participating
organisations: ready to integrate good practices and new methods into daily activities;
open to synergies with organisations active in different fields or in other socio-economic
sectors; strategic planning of professional development for staff in line with individual
needs and organisational objectives;
increased capacity of organisations and institutions to work and cooperate at
EU/international level;
improved sharing of good practices among organisations and institutions.
Key Action 3
The Actions implemented through Key Action 3 are intended to produce the main following
results:
improved quality, equity and inclusiveness of education and training systems as well as
youth and sport policies;
higher degree of transnational cooperation and mutual learning between competent
authorities and policy makers in the fields of education, training, youth and sport;
increased knowledge and analytical capacity to support evidence-based policies in the
fields of education, training, youth and sport;
availability of sound comparative international data and appropriate secondary analyses
for European and national policy making;
improved tools for assessment, transparency and recognition of skills and qualifications
acquired through formal, non-formal and informal learning;
good functioning of European networks in charge of guidance and implementing tools that
foster the transparency and recognition of skills and qualifications acquired through
formal, non-formal and informal learning;
active involvement of civil society networks and non-governmental organisations in
policy implementation;
increased participation of young people and youth stakeholders in the EU Youth Dialogue;
increased levels of participation of individuals in sport and physical activity;
higher degree of exchanges of good practices, dialogue, mutual learning and cooperation
among policy makers, practitioners and stakeholders from EU Member States, third
countries associated to the programme and third countries not associated to the
programme;
increased public awareness about European policies in the fields of education, training,
youth and sport as well as increased awareness about the results of the Erasmus+
Programme;
37
greater synergies with other EU Programmes, such as the Cohesion Policy Funds, Horizon
Europe, as well as with funding schemes at national or regional level.
38
EDUCATION, TRAINING AND YOUTH
KEY ACTION 1
This section of the Work Programme describes the action managed in indirect management by
the National Agencies (NA) of the Erasmus+ Programme under the budget lines education
and training and youth.
a) Mobility projects
Index references in budget table (WPI): 1.01, 1.02, 1.03, 1.04, 1.05, 5.01
Projects under this action promote mobility activities targeting learners (pupils, students,
trainees, apprentices, young people, adult learners), and staff (professors, teachers, trainers,
youth workers, and people working in organisations active in the education, training and
youth fields) and mainly aiming to support learners in the acquisition of competences
(knowledge, skills and attitudes, including language competences) with a view to improving
their personal, social,-educational and professional development, enhance employability,
entrepreneurship and improve career prospects on the labour market, and social inclusion;
Organisations active in the fields of education, training and youth will receive support from
the Erasmus+ Programme to carry out projects promoting different types of mobility.
Mobility activities involve a minimum of two participating organisations (at least one sending
and at least one receiving organisation) from different countries.
Mobility activities in the fields of higher education, VET and youth may also involve
participating organisations from third countries not associated to the programme.
These opportunities, funded by the Erasmus+ budget (Heading 2), include outgoing mobilities
towards third countries not associated to the programme. These opportunities are intended to
encourage an organisation in an EU Member State or third country associated to the
programme to develop outgoing mobility activities with several third countries not associated
to the programme, and are expected to cover the widest possible geographic scope. Higher
Education Institutions located in EU Member States and third countries associated to the
programme have also the opportunity under the Erasmus+ call 2022, using funding made
available from the EU external action instruments, to organise incoming and outgoing
mobilities of students and staff from/to third countries not associated to the programme.
Depending on the profile of participants involved, the following types of mobility projects are
supported under this action:
Mobility projects for higher education students and staff (funded by the Erasmus+ budget –
MFF Heading 2)
The following activities are supported: student mobility for studies; student mobility for
traineeships (including Digital Opportunity Traineeships); staff mobility for teaching; staff
mobility for training (including Digital Opportunity Traineeships); blended intensive
programmes.
39
Type of applicants targeted by this action: higher education institutions awarded with a higher
education accreditation as well as other public or private organisations coordinating a
consortium awarded with a higher education accreditation. Applicants must be established in
an EU Member State or third country associated to the programme.
Mobility project for Higher education students and staff from/to third countries not associated
to the programme (funded by the Erasmus+ budget – MFF Heading 6)
The following activities are supported: student mobility for studies; student mobility for
traineeships; staff mobility for teaching; staff mobility for training.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: higher education institutions awarded with a higher
education accreditation as well as other public or private organisations coordinating a
consortium awarded with a higher education accreditation. Applicants must be established in
an EU Member State or third country associated to the programme. Regions covered by this
action are all regions covered by the external action instruments.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: schools providing general education at pre-
primary, primary or secondary level; local and regional public authorities, coordination bodies
and other organisations with a role in the field of school education. Applicants must be
established in an EU Member State or third country associated to the programme.
40
Mobility of learners and staff in adult education
Type of applicants targeted by this action: organisations providing formal, informal and non-
formal adult education; local and regional public authorities, coordination bodies and other
organisations with a role in the field of adult education. Applicants must be established in an
EU Member State or third country associated to the programme.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157(1) of the FR.
48
Regulation (EU) 2021/1060 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 June 2021 laying down
common provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund Plus, the Cohesion
Fund, the Just Transition Fund and the European Maritime, Fisheries and Aquaculture Fund and financial rules
for those and for the Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund, the Internal Security Fund and the Instrument for
Financial Support for Border Management and Visa Policy, OJ L 231 of 30.6.2021, p. 159.
41
benefit of the Member State concerned. For 2022, the transferred resources will be allocated
to Higher education mobility and will amount to EUR 15 000 000. This amount is an
estimation and it is under reservation of the figure to be defined in the final version of the
Partnership Agreement and the corresponding transfer on adoption of the Partnership
Agreement. Based on the current estimation, the amount transferred from ESF+ to Erasmus+
is within the 5% threshold established in Article 26(1) of CPR49 for transfers to other
instrument under direct or indirect management.
The financial envelope of mobility projects, by country and field is indicated in Part III of this
Work Programme.
b) Youth participation
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 5.02
Projects under this Action are non-formal activities that promote youth participation in
Europe's democratic life and aim to:
provide young people with opportunities to engage and learn to participate in civic
society;
raise young people's awareness about European common values and fundamental
rights and contribute to the European integration process;
develop young people’s digital competences, media literacy and critical thinking in
non-formal learning settings;
bring together young people and decision makers at local, regional, national and
transnational level and/or contribute to the EU Youth Dialogue.
Support is provided to a wide range of activities aimed at reaching the objectives of the
action, including youth participation mobility activities and youth participation events.
49
Article 26(1) of CPR: “Member States may request, in the Partnership Agreement or in a request for an
amendment of a programme if agreed by the monitoring committee of the programme pursuant to point (d) of
Article 40(2), the transfer of up to 5 % of the initial national allocation of each Fund to any other instrument
under direct or indirect management, where such possibility is provided for in the basic act of such an
instrument.”
42
people. Applicants must be established in an EU Member State or third country associated to
the programme.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157(1) of the FR.
The financial envelope by country and field is indicated in Part III of this Work Programme.
NA 30 000 000
Projects under the Inclusion Action are non-formal activities aiming to allow young people
with fewer opportunities to participate in DiscoverEU. Support is provided to a wide range of
activities aimed at reaching the objectives of the action, with a view to:
Reaching out to young people with fewer opportunities that would not apply on their
own initiative to DiscoverEU;
Overcoming the obstacles that prevent young people with fewer opportunities to
participate in DiscoverEU;
Providing the necessary support so that these young people are able to travel;
Triggering and enhancing the development of competences and skills.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f),154 and 157(1) of the FR.
The financial envelope by country and field is indicated in Part III of this Work Programme.
NA 6 000 000
43
d) Accreditation in the fields of VET, school education, adult education and youth
Index references in budget table (WPI): 1.10, 5.04
The accreditations in the field of VET, school education, adult education, as well as accreditations
in the field of youth define a quality framework for mobility activities in these fields and certify
that the successful applicants are able to implement the applicable standards. The accreditations
will be subject to regular monitoring and the holder's continued compliance with their
requirements.
Accredited organisations will gain access to a simplified application procedure for Key Action 1
funding opportunities.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: any organisation eligible to apply under the
mobility projects in the fields of vocational education and training, school education, adult
education and youth (see section a) above).
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157(1) of the FR.
NA N/A
NA N/A
44
2. GRANTS AWARDED BY MEANS OF CALLS FOR PROPOSALS
Type of applicants targeted by this action: any public and private organisation active in the
field of higher education or youth. Applicants must be established in an EU Member State or
third country associated to the programme. Special attention will be paid to projects involving
institutions/organisations from the Atlantic and Indian Oceans and their neighbouring third
countries in Sub-Sahara Africa.
3. PROCUREMENTS
a) DiscoverEU General
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 5.06
50
https://europa.eu/youth/erasmusvirtual
45
DiscoverEU offers young people, who are 18 years old as a general rule 51, a chance to have a
short-term individual or group experience travelling across Europe by rail or other modes of
transport where necessary. The objectives are to give young people the chance to learn about
Europe, to discover Europe’s opportunities for their future education and life choices, to equip
young people with knowledge, life skills and competences of value to them, to encourage
connection and intercultural dialogue between the young people; to foster the young people’s
sense of belonging to the EU; as well as to inspire young people to embrace sustainable travel
in particular and environmental conscience in general.
This action will be used to provide travel passes and related services to selected DiscoverEU
participants via an external provider.
EACEA N/A
51
Exceptions to the age rule to be defined when publishing the conditions for the award of travel passes in order
to take COVID-19 pandemic circumstances into consideration.
46
KEY ACTION 2
To be funded, Cooperation Partnerships must address at least one of the following priorities:
Priorities applying to all Erasmus+ sectors:
47
Creation and implementation of internationalisation strategies for VET providers.
Tackling learning disadvantage, early school leaving and low proficiency in basic
skills;
Supporting teachers, school leaders and other teaching professions;
Development of key competences;
Promoting a comprehensive approach to language teaching and learning;
Promoting interest and excellence in science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics (STEM) and the STEAM approach, in particular girls’ interest in STEM;
Developing high quality early childhood education and care systems;
Recognition of learning outcomes for participants in cross-border learning mobility.
Improving the availability of high quality, flexible learning opportunities for adults;
Creating upskilling pathways, improving accessibility and increasing take-up of adult
education;
Improving the competences of educators and other adult learning staff;
Enhancing quality assurance in adult learning opportunities;
Developing forward-looking learning centres;
Creating and promoting learning opportunities among all citizens and generations.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: cooperation partnerships are open to any public or
private organisation active in the fields of education, training, youth and sport. Applications
for cooperation partnerships in the fields of education, training and youth are submitted to
National Agencies (indirect management), with the exception of applications submitted by
European NGOs and Europe-wide networks. Applicants must be established in an EU
Member State or third country associated to the programme.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157(1) of the FR.
The financial envelope by country and field is indicated in Part III of this Work Programme.
48
Youth: 85 482 341
Small-scale Partnerships aim at widening access to the programme to small-scale actors and
individuals who are hard to reach in the fields of school education, adult education, vocational
education and training and youth. With low grant amounts awarded to organisations, short
duration and simple administrative requirements, this action aims to reach out to grassroots
organisations and newcomers to Erasmus+, enhancing the access to the programme for
organisations with smaller organisational capacity.
Small-scale Partnerships support flexible formats, combining activities with transnational and
national character, although with a European dimension, that increase organisations means to
reach out to people with fewer opportunities.
To be funded, small-scale Partnerships must address at least one of the following priorities:
Priorities applying to all Erasmus+ sectors:
Tackling learning disadvantage, early school leaving and low proficiency in basic
skills;
Supporting teachers, school leaders and other teaching professions;
Development of key competences;
Promoting a comprehensive approach to language teaching and learning;
Promoting interest and excellence in science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics (STEM) and the STEAM approach, in particular girls’ interest in STEM;
Developing high quality early childhood education and care systems;
Recognition of learning outcomes for participants in cross-border learning mobility.
49
Improving the availability of high quality, flexible learning opportunities for adults;
Creating upskilling pathways, improving accessibility and increasing take-up of adult
education;
Improving the competences of educators and other adult learning staff;
Enhancing quality assurance in adult learning opportunities;
Developing forward-looking learning centres;
Creating and promoting learning opportunities among all citizens and generations.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: small-scale partnerships are open to any public or
private organisation active in the fields of education, training youth and sport. Applications
for small-scale partnerships in the fields of vocational education and training, school
education, adult education and youth are submitted to National Agencies (indirect
management). Applicants must be established in an EU Member State or third country
associated to the programme.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157(1) of the FR.
The financial envelope by country and field is indicated in Part III of this Work Programme.
50
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
Eligible participants:
The applicants (potential beneficiaries and their affiliated entities if any) must be:
- Higher Education Institutions holding a valid Erasmus Charter for Higher Education
(ECHE) and entities affiliated to them, including:
o Higher Education Institutions already involved in deep institutional
transnational cooperation, such as those being part of European Universities
selected under the 2019 Erasmus+ call;
o Higher Education Institutions wishing to establish new deep institutional
transnational cooperation in a new alliance.
51
- Any other organisation - consisting of the above referred higher education institutions
specifically set up with the purpose of implementing deep institutional transnational
cooperation, including joint educational activities.
52
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
53
The networks aim for "upward convergence" of VET excellence. They will be open for the
involvement of countries with well-developed vocational excellence systems, as well as those
in the process of developing similar approaches, aimed at exploring the full potential of VET
institutions to play a proactive role in support of growth and innovation.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: any public or private organisation active in the field
of vocational education and training, or in the world of work. Applicants must be established
in an EU Member State or third country associated to the programme.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: Teacher education institutions, public or private
organisations active in the field of teacher education and practice/training schools. Applicants
must be established in an EU Member State or third country associated to the programme.
The Alliances for Innovation aim to strengthen Europe’s innovation capacity by boosting
innovation through cooperation and flow of knowledge among higher education, vocational
education and training (both initial and continuous), and the broader socio-economic
environment, including research. These Alliances should also seek to contribute to the New
54
European Bauhaus initiative, with a view to embed innovative and sustainable approaches in
education.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: a wide range of public and private organisations
(higher education institutions; VET providers; companies, or industry or sector representative
organisations, such as chambers, trade unions or trade associations) active in the fields of
education and training. Applicants must be established in an EU Member State or third
country associated to the programme.
55
a) foster innovation in terms of scope, ground-breaking methods and practices, and/or
b) ensure a transfer of innovation (across countries, policy sectors or target groups), thus
ensuring at EU level a sustainable exploitation of innovative project results and/or
transferability into different contexts and audiences.
The partnerships should be composed of a mix of public and private organisations combining
researchers, practitioners and partners with the capacity to reach policy-makers.
Lot 1: Cross-sectoral priorities
Proposals submitted under lot 1 must address one of these 2 priorities:
Priority 1: Supporting high quality and inclusive digital education, in line with the aims
of the Digital Education Action Plan.
Projects will address specifically at least one of the following three areas: a) Key success
factors for inclusive and high quality digital education and training; b) Artificial Intelligence
in Education; c) High quality digital education content.
Priority 2: Supporting education and training systems to adapt for the green transition
Projects will address specifically at least one of the following three areas: a) Whole institution
approaches to sustainability; b) Skills and competences development of learners and
educators; c) Empowering citizens to act on sustainability, the environment and climate change,
including in the context of the new Education for Climate Coalition. These Partnerships should
also seek to contribute to the New European Bauhaus initiative, with a view to embed
innovative and sustainable approaches in education through at least one of the areas
mentioned above.
The indicative budget for Lot 1 is EUR 27 200 000.
Lot 2: Vocational Education and Training
Proposals submitted under Lot 2 must address one of these 3 priorities:
Priority 3: Supporting the Pact for Skills
These projects will aim to identify, test, develop or assess tools or structures focused on
brokering and building cooperation between large companies and micro, small and medium
companies (SMEs) along a value chain in the same industrial ecosystem 52, with the
involvement of other players relevant for up- and reskilling. The objective of this cooperation
must be the upskilling and reskilling of people at working age in a particular value chain or
industrial ecosystem. The projects can also serve the purpose of laying the ground for large-
scale skills partnerships in industrial ecosystems.
Priority 4: Structures and mechanisms for Applied research in VET
These projects will aim to identify, assess, test, and develop structures and mechanisms for
applied research in VET, to broaden its engagement in R&D and innovation systems. This
engagement relies on building the capacity of VET systems, with the close involvement of
teachers and trainers, as well as VET learners, to undertake applied research and manage
innovation projects together with other organisations, and in particular SMEs. The results of
these projects should have the potential to be mainstreamed, and contribute to the
modernisation of VET systems and their engagement in applied research and experimental
development, while providing learners with opportunities for challenge/project based
learning.
52
As presented in the Annual Single Market Economy Report 2021 https://ec.europa.eu/info/files/staff-working-
document-annual-single-market-report-2021_en
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Priority 5: Green skills in the Vocational Education and Training sector
As stipulated in Action 6 of the European Skills Agenda, the Commission will support the
acquisition of skills for the green transition. This transition requires professionals who build
and master green technologies, including digital ones, develop green products, services and
business models, create innovative nature-based solutions and help minimise the
environmental footprint of activities. It also requires re- and upskilling of the workforce to
accompany labour market transitions and mobility.
This priority will provide support for projects focusing on two interlinked aspects:
- Developing of a set of core green skills for the labour market to guide training across
different economic sectors with a view to creating a generation of climate,
environment and health conscious professionals and green economic operators, and
- Helping to integrate this set of core green skills into vocational education and training
curricula, as well as into the training of teachers, trainers and other staff undertaking
initial education and training as well as continuing professional development.
The indicative budget for Lot 2 is EUR 13 800 000.
Projects should include activities related to the three upskilling pathways steps:
skills assessment;
provision of a tailored, flexible and quality learning offer;
validation and recognition of skills acquired.
They should also include support activities such as guidance and outreach.
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EUR-Lex - 32016H1224(01) - EN - EUR-Lex (europa.eu)
54
https://ec.europa.eu/social/BlobServlet?docId=22832&langId=en (p. 14)
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i) Capacity building in Higher Education – Heading 6
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 2.16
Specifically:
Improve the quality of higher education and enhance its relevance for the labour market
and society;
Improve the level of competences, skills and employability potential of students higher
education institutions (HEIs) by developing new and innovative education programmes,
including micro-credentials;
Promote inclusive education, equality, equity, non-discrimination and the promotion of
civic-competences in higher education;
Enhance the teaching, assessment mechanisms for HEI staff and students, quality
assurance, management, governance, inclusion, innovation, knowledge base, and
entrepreneurial capacities, as well the internationalisation of HEIs;
Increase the capacities of HEIs, bodies in charge of higher education and competent
authorities (notably ministries) to modernise their higher education systems, particularly
in terms of governance and financing, by supporting the definition, implementation and
monitoring of reform processes;
Improve the training of teachers and continuous professional development in order to
impact the longer term quality of the education system;
Stimulate cooperation of institutions, capacity building and exchange of good practice;
Foster regional academic cooperation through joint initiatives.
The action will ensure equity and inclusion, strengthening of the wider economic and social
ecosystems, capacity building as well as employability transversally across the action.
Addressing regional issues, building alliances and coalitions, piloting new approaches and
initiatives built on country ownership will be strongly encouraged. Supporting the
implementation of the Green deal, increasing the capacity of third countries not associated to
the programme use of ICT and student participation in planning and learning processes will
be cross-cutting elements of the action. Coherence, synergies and complementarity with other
relevant European Union interventions in the field will be ensured. Priorities will be
established in line with the EC priorities for each of the E+ programme Regions.
Three specific strands are available within the CBHE action: Strand 1 – FOSTERING access
to cooperation in Higher Education; Strand 2 – Partnerships for INNOVATION in Higher
Education and Strand 3 – Structural reform projects.
58
Applicants must be established in an EU Member State, third country associated to the
programme or third country not associated to the programme targeted by this action.
Type of participating organisations in this action: HEI institutions, association or organisation
of HEIs, as well as legally recognised national or international rector, teacher or student
organisations, bodies in charge of higher education and competent authorities and
organisations and/or associations active in the labour market or in the fields of education,
training or youth.
This action in the field of Vocational Education and Training supports international
cooperation projects based on multilateral partnerships between organisations active in the
field of VET in EU Member State, third countries associated to the programme or third
countries not associated to the programme. They aim to support the relevance, accessibility,
and responsiveness of VET institutions and systems in third countries not associated to the
programme, as a driver of sustainable socio-economic development. This action is a key
component of the EU’s response to the challenges of quality, relevance and responsiveness of
VET in third countries not associated to the programme for employment, socio-economic
recovery, growth and prosperity. The action aligns to the overarching priorities of the
European Commission: Green deal (including climate change, environment and energy),
digital transformation and data technologies, alliances for sustainable growth and jobs,
migration partnerships, and governance, peace and security and to the external dimension of
EU internal policies in the field of education. It contributes to a successful green and
sustainable global economic recovery in the third countries not associated to the programme,
linked to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Paris Agreement.
Specifically:
reinforce the links between the VET system and its labour market so as to better align
VET to (emerging) local labour market opportunities;
increase the link between VET profiles and local/regional/national strategies and priorities
impacted by skills, in particular those supported by other European Union actions, in
order to ensure coherence;
increase the capacities of VET providers especially in the fields of management,
governance, inclusion, quality assurance, innovation; and internationalisation;
support the exposure of staff, managers, policy makers and senior teachers to approaches
bringing the labour market and VET closer (dual learning, curriculum development with
private sector partners…);
improve the knowledge, technical, managerial and pedagogical skills of VET teachers and
trainers;
integrate the input from teachers/trainers, VET learners and employers, from private
sector in particular, into curriculum, profile design and training reform;
59
improve the level of competences, skills and employability potential of VET learners by
developing new and innovative VET education programmes, especially those delivering
key competences, such as languages and ICT skills;
foster cooperation across different regions of the world through joint initiatives.
The action will ensure equity and inclusion, strengthening of the wider economic and social
ecosystems, capacity building as well as employability. Building alliances and coalitions,
piloting new approaches and initiatives built on country ownership will be strongly
encouraged. Coherence, synergies and complementarity with other relevant European Union
interventions in the field will be ensured.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: any public and private organisation active in the
VET field and established in an EU Member State or a third country associated to the
programme.
Type of participating organisations in this action: vocational education and training providers
(schools, institutes, etc.) and other public or private organisations active in the field of VET
and in the labour market.
raising the capacity of organisations working with young people outside formal
learning;
promoting non-formal learning activities in non-associated third countries, especially
targeting young people with fewer opportunities, while ensuring the active
participation of young people in society;
supporting the development of youth work in non-associated third countries,
improving its quality and recognition;
fostering the development, testing and launching of schemes and programmes of non-
formal learning mobility in non-associated third countries;
contributing to the implementation of the EU Youth Strategy (2019-2027) including
the 11 European Youth goals;
fostering cooperation across different regions of the world through joint initiatives.
enhancing synergies and complementarities with formal education systems and/or the
labour market.
60
Type of participating organisations targeted by this action: any public and private organisation
active in the field of youth. Applicants must be established in an EU Member State, third
country associated to the programme or third country not associated to the programme
targeted by this action.
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b) EPALE (Electronic Platform for Adult Learning in Europe) - National Support
Services (NSS)
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 2.21
National authorities nominate an EPALE National Support Service (NSS) in their countries
with a view to supporting the implementation of the EPALE platform. The EPALE NSS have
the following functions:
Promote the use of, and participation in EPALE, to local, regional and national
stakeholders with the objective to reach all EPALE target groups;
Create, gather or facilitate the creation of local/regional/national content to be shared
in EPALE;
Support the EPALE Central Support Service in developing and maintaining the
platform, including its multilingualism.
The organisations appointed as NSS are invited to submit an activity plan.
The beneficiaries of the grant are the National Support Services. The support services for
Electronic Platform for Adult Learning in Europe are identified in Article 6 (d) of the
Regulation. The grant will be awarded in conformity with the provisions of Article 195 (d)
FR, and will cover a period of 33 months, from April 2022 to December 2024.
4. PROCUREMENTS
a) EPALE (Electronic Platform for Adult Learning in Europe) Central Support Service
Index references in budget table (WPI): 2.30
The EPALE Central Support Service (CSS) pursues the following objectives:
supports the process of building a European adult learning community through enhancing
and speeding up the process of closer cooperation, networking and exchanges;
capitalizes on the results of projects, products and activities funded through the Erasmus+
and other European programmes, as well as strategies, tools and results produced at local,
regional or national level;
provides accessible, good quality information about policy and practice and learning
products;
secures a high level of platform performance for learning and for cooperation between
adult learning stakeholders, facilitating communities of practice;
develops a critical mass of users who play an active role in developing the platform into a
lively online community;
provides training and support to the National Support Services, for them to perform their
tasks and animate their networks;
62
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
Increasingly, the European Youth portal will also support features for the co-creation of content
with young people and youth stakeholders. Increased communication activities shall support the
branding of the European Youth Portal among young people and youth organisations. Finally, a
youth work platform providing space for sharing information, knowledge and good practices for
the youth work community is planned to be integrated in the EYP.
63
- Online tools to compare qualifications across borders to help people understand the
learning offers in other Member States and to facilitate recognition and recruitment
practice;
- Support Member States in the development of digital credential transformation plans,
and in the preparation of re-usable data-sets of qualifications and learning
opportunities as set out in the EU Data Strategy;
- Establish a governance model for the on-going management of the Europass Digital
Credentials Framework in close cooperation with Member States and key stakeholders
as set out in the EU Data Strategy;
- Evolving support and maintenance of the website, including an improved 24/7 support
as critical website.
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e) Erasmus+ HE tools (European Student Card Initiative)
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 2.33
The European Student Card initiative will simplify, facilitate and boost student mobility in
Europe by substantially reducing the administrative burden in terms of time, expense and
effort. To maximise the benefits and efficiency gains of the initiative, the use of the ‘Erasmus
without paper’ network and the digital procedures it enables shall become standard for all
participating higher education institutions. The implementation in 2022 will ensure that pre-
conditions for the digitalisation are met within higher education institutions including
solutions for student and staff authentication. In addition, the development and
implementation of the European Student Card will lead to new possibilities for students to
benefit from on-campus and off-campus services while contributing to a European student
identity.
The work in 2022 will include the full integration of the Erasmus+ App into the Erasmus
Without Paper Network workflows and ensure its interoperability with all IT systems of
higher education institutions in order to allow all mobile students to benefit from it. The
functionalities of the Erasmus+ App as a student interface will be continuously upgraded in
line with the timeline of further digitalisation of administrative procedures around mobilities
and in line with the expansion of the European Student Card Initiative to further target
audiences.
The Erasmus Mundus (EM) action will set up a support structure aiming at establishing a
platform of EM stakeholders in order to organize various activities: events, cluster meetings,
studies, study visits, social networking, etc. The aim is to provide organisations involved in
the EM program and the Commission a framework for the exchange of experiences,
knowledge and good practices.
5. OTHER ACTIONS
KEY ACTION 3
a) Training and Cooperation Activities in the fields of education, training and youth
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 3.01, 5.20
The Training and Cooperation Activities (TCA) aim to bring added value and increased
quality in the overall Erasmus+ Programme implementation and so contribute to increasing
the impact of the Programme at systemic level.
Training and Cooperation Activities consist of:
Training, support and contact-seminars of potential Programme participants targeting
programme objectives;
Thematic activities linked to the objectives, priority target groups and themes of the
Programme;
66
Transnational evaluation and analysis of programme results and other formats
focusing on the dissemination of programme results or peer-learning activities;
Activities linked to European-level events, such as the 2022 European Year of Youth.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157(1) of the FR.
The country distribution of the budget is provided in Part III of this Work Programme.
67
Erasmus+ programme. The concerned EU VET tools are laid down in the relevant EU VET
policy documents such as the European Framework for Quality and Effective Apprenticeships
and the Council Recommendation on VET (covering the EQAVET Framework, EU core
profiles, graduate tracking, etc.). The experts should in particular provide support to the
beneficiaries of EU funded projects supported by the Erasmus+ programme to implement the
abovementioned EU VET tools in their projects. The National Agencies will be invited to
submit proposals, including an activity plan and an estimated budget, for the support of these
Teams.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157(1) of the FR.
The distribution of the budget is provided in Part III of this Work Programme.
NA 3 000 000
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157(1) of the FR.
The distribution of the budget is provided in Part III of this Work Programme.
NA 5 000 000
68
e) Eurodesk network
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 5.23
The Eurodesk Network offers information services to young people and those who work with
them on European opportunities, notably in the education, training and youth fields, as well as
the involvement of young people in European activities. It contributes to the animation of the
European Youth Portal. The Eurodesk Network offers enquiry answering services, funding
information, events and publications.
In 2022 the Eurosdesk network will actively contribute to the European Year of Youth.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to Erasmus+ National Agencies via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 157 (1) of the FR.
The distribution of the budget is provided in Part III of this Work Programme.
NA 2 640 000
69
The maximum EU contribution will indicatively be EUR 1 000 000.
Youth
Support for the on-going cooperation with the Council of Europe will cover better
understanding and knowledge of youth and youth policy development as regards issues of
common interest for both institutions; recognition, quality and visibility of youth work and
youth workers education and training, and dialogue for youth workers; activities of common
interest in specific regions, with a focus on the Southern Mediterranean, South-East Europe
and Eastern Europe and the Caucasus regions.
The maximum EU contribution will indicatively be EUR 1 600 000 and covers a 2-year
implementation period.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to the Council of Europe (CoE) via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 156(1) of the FR.
The Commission authorizes the recognition of the eligibility of costs incurred from 1 January
2022. This retroactivity aims to ensure programme implementation continuity.
The Commission cooperates with the OECD on activities that support countries improving
skills governance, with particular reference to VET and adult learning systems and
programmes. The maximum EU contribution envisaged in 2022 will indicatively be EUR 200
000. The EU contribution covers work towards the Skills Outlook 2023. This action is to be
implemented by DG EMPL.
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National reviews
The OECD and the European Commission will carry out national reviews of education and
training policy to support policy reforms in Member States. The reviews will be conducted on
a voluntary basis upon requests from the Member States. Outcomes and recommendations of
the national reviews will feed into the assessment by the Commission of Member States’
challenges and policy efforts in the European Semester process, and of the implementation of
the Recovery and Resilience Facility, as well as progress at national level towards the
objectives of the European Education Area. The maximum EU contribution will indicatively
be EUR 250 000.
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overview of best practice in the development of digital education and training. The maximum
EU contribution will indicatively be EUR 750 000.
Micro-credentials
In order to support the European Commission initiative on the European approach to micro-
credentials, the cooperation with OECD will enable policy makers and stakeholders in higher
education and vocational education and training to get a clear picture of the possible
implementation of micro-credentials. Building upon its recent and ongoing analysis, the
OECD will focus on the changes at Member States level, as well as on cooperation of higher
education and vocational education and training institutions as well as private providers in the
field of micro-credentials. The maximum EU contribution will indicatively be EUR 150 000
for HE and EUR 100 000 for VET.
Comparative study for the 2022 PISA results in the Eastern Partnership countries
A regional comparative study on the PISA 2022 results for participating Eastern partnership
countries will summarise and compare the PISA 2022 results by field of study, identify
common weaknesses and propose measures to tackle them. OECD will prepare a policy paper
containing key messages, recommendations and concise analysis to improve the countries'
performance in the next PISA. The maximum EU contribution will indicatively be EUR 100
000.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to the OECD via the conclusion of
Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with Articles 62
(1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 156(1) of the FR.
The Commission authorizes the recognition of the eligibility of costs incurred from 1 January
2022. This retroactivity aims to ensure programme implementation continuity.
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antisemitism and fostering Jewish life, adopted on 6 October 2021. The international
organisation is best equipped to support EU Member States and their civil societies to develop
effective and sustainable preventive measures through education. This initiative will also
contribute to increasing knowledge and analytical capacity to support evidence-based policies
in the fields of education and training, and support a higher degree of exchanges of good
practices, dialogue, mutual learning and cooperation among policy makers and practitioners
from EU Member States.
The maximum EU contribution will indicatively be EUR 1 000 000 and covers a 2-year
implementation period.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to UNESCO via the conclusion of
Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with Articles 62
(1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 156(1) of the FR.
73
EMPL 200 000
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Assurance System, as it is foreseen in the European Education Area Communication;
support implementation in EU Member States and third countries associated to the
programme of the UNESCO Global Convention on the Recognition of Qualifications
concerning Higher Education 2019 and the Convention on the Recognition of
Qualifications concerning Higher Education in the European Region (LRC), in
particular for the recognition of qualifications of "refugees, displaced persons and
persons in a refugee-like situation", according to Article VII in the LRC.
An invitation to submit proposals will be sent to the NARIC centres. The NARIC network is
identified in Article 7(b) of the Regulation. Grants will be awarded on the basis of Article 195
(d) FR and will cover 2-year implementation period.
NARIC projects should be transnational projects involving at least three NARIC centres for a
duration of 2 years. Non-NARIC institutions (European Network of Information Centres -
ENIC, or any other organisation active in the field) can participate in projects under this
activity, but their financial support through an EU grant is limited to up to 25% of the entire
budget allocated to the project.
In addition, the action will support one NARIC centre for the organisation of the ENIC-
NARIC annual meeting and two NARIC centres for the organisation of the technical support
team. This support for the organisation of the ENIC-NARIC annual meeting and the technical
support team is part of the overall invitation to submit proposals that is sent to NARIC
centres, as these serve to support the objectives of the action.
75
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
The National Erasmus+ Offices (NEOs) will continue to assist the Commission, EU
Delegations and the national authorities in the implementation of the Erasmus+ Programme in
third countries not associated to the programme i.e. countries neighbouring the EU in the
Western Balkans, Eastern Europe and Southern Mediterranean, as well as in Central Asia and
the Russian Federation. The NEOs will have a widened scope to also cover policy
developments in the fields of higher education, vocational education and training, youth and
sport. The NEOs will act as a focal point in the country for potential applicants, beneficiaries
and all relevant stakeholders for cooperation activities under the programme.
Their mandate covers support, promotion and dissemination activities related to the Erasmus+
activities open to cooperation with third countries not associated to the programme (under
Key Actions 1, 2 and 3). The NEOs will maintain contacts with other NEOs, especially in the
same region, with Erasmus+ National Agencies and other Erasmus+ National Contact points
in the other regions, in particular for partner search, exchange of good practices or
organisation of joint events. They provide the administrative, logistical and financial support
to the national teams of Higher Education Reform Experts (HEREs) and support and
coordinate the activities of the teams under the guidance of the national authorities.
Taking into account of their technical competence and high degree of specialisation, the
National Erasmus+ Offices (NEOs) are considered to meet the criteria stipulated in Article
195 (f) FR for bodies implementing actions with specific characteristics, as national entity
designated to provide a pool of expertise to promote reforms and enhance progress and
reforms in higher education in the countries concerned. In accordance with Art. 190.3 FR,
external action may be financed up to 100%.
76
As the beneficiaries can only be bodies designated at national level by national authorities in
each EU Member State, they are considered to be in a de facto monopoly situation (Article
195 (c) FR).
The allocation covers 3-year period. The distribution of the budget is provided in Part III of this
Work Programme.
Support will be provided to the European Youth Forum, an organisation pursuing a goal of
general European interest, with due respect for the following principles:
The Forum’s independence in the selection of its members, ensuring the broadest possible
representation of different kinds of youth organisations;
Its autonomy in the detailed specification of its activities;
The broadest possible involvement in the European Youth Forum's activities of non-
member youth organisations and young people who do not belong to organisations;
The active contribution by the European Youth Forum to the political processes relevant
to youth at European level, in particular by responding to the European institutions when
they consult civil society and explaining the positions adopted by these institutions to its
members.
In 2022 the European Youth Forum will actively contribute to the European Year of Youth.
The European Youth Forum is identified in Article 11 (c) of the Regulation. The grant will be
awarded on the basis of Article 195 (d) FR subject to approval of an appropriate work plan
and estimated budget, contributing to its eligible operating costs.
h) Eurodesk Brussels-link
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 5.34
Eurodesk Brussels-link ensures the coordination of the Eurodesk Network composed of
national units established in the various EU Member States, third countries associated to the
programme and third countries not associated to the programme. Eurodesk Brussels-link is
the European Secretariat and coordination body of the Eurodesk network. It is composed of a
Director and the staff members implementing the work plan and decisions of the Eurodesk
Executive Committee and the General Assembly. The Brussels-link ensures that the activities
77
of the Eurodesk centres within the network are aligned with the organisation’s overall
objectives and mission, and it provides first-hand and high-quality European information on
youth mobility.
Support to Eurodesk is identified in Article 11 (d) of the Regulation. The grant will be
awarded on the basis of Article 195 (d) FR subject to approval of an activity plan and an
estimated budget.
In 2022, Eurodesk Brussels-link will actively contribute to the European Year of Youth.
The grant will also aim at co-financing the costs linked to the national coordination of
activities organised by others, national communication about the European Year of Youth and
support activities.
The grant is subject to approval of an action plan and an estimated budget.
The distribution of the budget is provided in Part III of this Work Programme.
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3. SPECIFIC GRANTS AWARDED UNDER A FRAMEWORK PARTNERSHIP
a) European policy network in the field of education of children and young people with
a migrant background
Index references in budget table (WPI): 3.31
The call aims at supporting one European policy network to raise awareness, analyse and
develop policy approaches, and promote good practices and innovative initiatives in the field
of education of children and young people with a migrant background.
The overall objective of this call is to support an EU-wide network of relevant organisations
(policymakers, practitioners, researchers and stakeholders, including with migrant
background) to promote co-operation, policy development and implementation at different
governance levels and support the integration of children and young people with migration
background in school education.
The network builds on existing work developed at European level, especially initiatives and
projects supported by the European Union's education programmes.
To achieve this, a call for proposals will be launched aiming at concluding one Framework
Partnership Agreement, covering a maximum duration of 4 years. Within the scope of the
Framework Partnership Agreements (FPA), specific grant agreements will be concluded,
based on a commonly agreed work plan and related budget.
Applicants should be legal entities (associations, foundations and other similar national or
international bodies; national education centres; higher education institutions and research
centres) established in one of the EU Member States and third countries associated to the
55
https://educationpolicynetwork.eu/
79
programme. The network may include partners from third countries not associated to the
programme; the cost of their participation must be financed entirely by non-EU resources.
80
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
Specific Objectives:
- Raise awareness of the EU Youth Strategy including the European Youth Goals, through
actions to engage, connect and empower youth;
- Increase commitment and cooperation of youth civil society actors with public authorities
for the implementation of policies in areas relevant for young people;
- Boost youth stakeholder participation, including by building upon the potential of digital
communication alongside other forms of participation;
- Boost youth civil society involvement in the dissemination of policy and programme
actions including results and good practices among their membership and beyond.
Targeted applicants are legal entities established in EU Member States and third countries
associated to the programme.
There appears to be a need for a legal statute for alliances of higher education institutions
allowing them to access, share and pool joint resources - such as financial, human, digital and
physical resources, and services. The Commission has requested a study on the matter. The
lack of such a statute precludes the capacity of higher education institutions to reach a deeper
81
level of cooperation and their competitiveness. There is also a need to explore the feasibility
of a joint European degree that will recognise the value of transnational experiences in the
higher education qualification the students obtain, and remove red tape for the delivery of
joint programmes.
The priority for this European policy experimentation is to support higher education
institutions to pilot a possible legal statute at European level for alliances of higher education
institutions - such as the European Universities, but also beyond - for example through a
European Grouping of Territorial Cooperation (EGTC) and/or to pilot a European degree
label for joint transnational programmes responding to a number of criteria. The Commission
has requested a study on the matter, but expects that a legal statute can help alliances of
universities to achieve their ambition of making truly common strategic decisions, act
together with a legal personality, and facilitate pooling together resources and activities.
Where appropriate, national authorities in charge of the EGTC Regulation could benefit from
this support as well, to improve the functioning of the EGTC Regulation on their territory
when it comes to higher education cooperation.
It is expected that the results of the pilot actions will be shared with the relevant public
authorities, allowing for exchange of best practices and transferring knowledge.
Targeted participating organisations (applicants) are higher education institutions holding a
valid Erasmus Charter for Higher Education (ECHE) and entities affiliated to them, as well as
public or private organisations active in the fields of education and training or in other fields
relevant to this policy experimentation. Applicants must be established in an EU Member
State or in a third country associated to the programme.
A project proposal can only be coordinated and submitted, on behalf of all applicants, by a
higher education institutions holding a valid Erasmus Charter for Higher Education (ECHE).
The minimum partnership composition requirement for this call is 2 higher education
institutions holding a valid Erasmus Charter for Higher Education (ECHE) representing
different EU Member States and/or third countries associated to the programme.
56
Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions funded under Horizon Europe
82
EACEA 2 000 000
5. PROCUREMENTS
b) Supporting implementation of the Digital Education Action Plan and the Digital
Education Hub
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 3.41
In 2022, Erasmus+ will continue to support the general implementation of the Digital Education
Action Plan, including i.a. the important aspects of digital education content and the Digital
Education Hackathon and the exchanges of the future network of national advisory services on
digital education.
Digital Education Content Framework:
The work will involve mapping, collecting evidence and engaging experts in developing solutions
to address key questions around quality, certification, multilingualism, transferability, cultural
diversity and verification of digital education content.
The Digital Education Hackathon:
The Digital Education Hackathon is a contest that engages organisations working in education
and training in the EU and globally to identify challenges and co-create solutions for the
future of education in the digital age. The Digital Education Hackathon is the main initiative
promoting user driven innovation under the Digital Education Hub. The initiative will be
scaled up to be linked to the Digital Education Hub community. The Hackathon will expand
its outreach, increase involvement of different stakeholders and create a more dynamic and
continuous form of user-driven engagement in digital education innovation.
83
States and EFTA countries in exchanging hands-on experience and good practice on the
enabling factors and drivers of digital education.
In addition, this action envisages support to communication and dissemination activities related to
the organisation of workshops, seminars and local outreach events on digital education.
84
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
d) Exchanges of experience and good practice, and peer counselling (partially co-
delegated to DG EMPL)
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 3.44, 3.45, 5.50
Exchanges of experience and good practice are an integral part of the European Education
Area toolbox to implement the European priorities in education and training of the European
Education Area and beyond (2021-2030). They take place in the context of peer learning and
peer counselling activities, usually part of EEA Working Groups, which enable Member
States sharing similar policy challenges to work in clusters. Peer counselling is a tailor-made,
very concrete and country-specific exercise to help a Member State with a particular reform
effort by bringing together experts from other Member States who have successfully dealt
with similar issues. Peer reviews in the context of Directors-General meetings, focusing on
country specific challenges and implementation of Council Recommendations (such as the
Council Recommendation on vocational education and training for sustainable
competitiveness, social fairness and resilience), support Member States' efforts to improve
their education and training systems. The dissemination of good practices and lessons learned,
using international evidence when relevant, can be enhanced through thematic events, policy
learning exchanges, support to Communities of Practice, and any arrangement for knowledge
transfer and exchange on what works in education.
In the field of youth, the programme will fund mutual learning activities under the EU Youth
Strategy. These could include expert groups, peer-learning and peer-counselling activities.
The role of the expert network is to provide independent expertise on on-going policy
reforms, progress and challenges of education and training systems (including VET and adult
learning), on addressing country-specific recommendations and on Member States’ actions
linked to the implementation of the European Education Area by 2025, as well as, on
85
identifying future policy orientations and assessing the impact of the use of the EU funds,
such as Recovery and Resilience Facility and the European Structural and Investment Funds.
In the areas of education within the remit of DG EAC, the expert network activities continue
based on the contract signed in 2021. Due to its role in supporting the implementation of the
European Semester process and priorities set out in the Annual Sustainable Growth Strategy,
the expert network will focus on EU Member States.
57
European Center for the Development of Vocational Training
58
EENEE: European Expert Network on Economics of Education; NESET: Network of Experts on the Social
dimension of Education and Training
86
Both academic networks contribute to the analysis of education and training policies, their
reforms and implementation through country reports and cross-country analysis.
In 2022, EENEE and NESET will support the Commission's work on improving the
performance of education and training systems and making them more efficient, by providing
expert advice and processing relevant evidence and information.
The implementation period of NESET coming to an end in 2022, an open call for tenders will
be launched in order to conclude a Framework contract for the next four-year period with an
indicative budget of EUR 1 000 000.
h) Prospective platform
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 3.50
The Commission will call upon relevant institutions and experts with specific foresight
knowledge to carry out prospective studies connected to the dimensions of the European
Education Area. Europe's education systems are impacted by several important external
drivers such as the COVID-19 crisis, demographic trends, technological advancement and
changes in Europe's social fabric. The purpose of the studies is to investigate and develop
detailed, informed views on how such drivers are likely to change schools, pedagogy,
methods, learning outcomes etc. in the medium term (2030). The Commission aims with the
results at stimulating a European level debate on the future of education to generate new
forward-looking policy ideas and present to Member States possible avenues for future policy
development.
87
qualifications. The purpose of the study is to see to which extent evaluation statements of
qualifications follow a learning outcomes approach.
88
l) University-Business Cooperation
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 3.57
This action envisages support to:
the organisation of the European University-Business Forum and Thematic Forums and/or
workshops, seminars and local outreach events on University Business Cooperation
related issues and relevant projects funded under Erasmus+;
hosting, maintenance, further development and running of an electronic platform -
complementing the Forums and events - for sharing good practices and provide virtual
space for interactive discussion and exchange on aspects and issues related to University
Business Cooperation;
other activities related to the Guiding Framework for Entrepreneurial higher education
institutions.
89
n) Meetings with grant-holders and other stakeholders
Index references in budget table (WPI): 3.61, 3.62, 5.53
The costs related to grant-holders and other meetings for supporting Programme
implementation are included in the Work Programme. This action will support info days,
kick-off events and other meetings with accredited organisations in order to promote the
Programme.
o) Education Summit
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 3.63
The European Education Summit is the annual high-level event enabling the Member States’
Education Ministers to meet and exchange with representatives of European institutions and
with key education stakeholders about current topics and trends in education in the EU in an
open dialogue setting.
In 2022, the thematic focus will be on new developments and trends in teaching and learning,
including inter alia further developments of the European Education Area and the Digital
Education Action Plan, recovery and COVID-19 measures, education for environmental
sustainability.
p) Youth events
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 5.54
The action supports the preparation and organisation of the European Year of Youth 2022 in
terms of communication, engagement, outreach and events and other activities linked to a
reinforced visibility of the action of the EU in the youth field, in line with the EU Youth
Strategy. The expected result is higher visibility, better outreach and more awareness of the
European Year of Youth as well as of the new actions offered under the 2021-2027 programme.
In addition, the action supports the community management activities of DiscoverEU, such as
the daily management of handling the questions of young people asked in the #DiscoverEU
Official Facebook Group.
90
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
91
programmes that are benchmarked to agreed standards via an evaluation procedure receive an
EMT quality label and become members of the European Master’s in Translation Network,
which promotes exchanges and cooperation in Europe;
European Day of Languages "Season" is a series of events (including workshops, round-table
discussions, cross-border events and events matching students' skills with the demands of the
labour market) that are organised on and around September 2022 in the Member States by
DGT Field Offices located in the EU Representations. These events aim to promote the role
of languages and translation in a multilingual Europe;
"Translating Europe" Forum brings together the main constituencies of EAC's and DGT's
stakeholders such as the language industry and the translation services of public
administrations and higher education institutions in order to explore multilingual skills for the
labour market and the development of various language professions.
92
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
The National Teams of Higher Education Reform Experts (HEREs) provide a pool of
expertise to promote reforms and enhance progress in Higher Education in the Western
Balkans, Neighbouring countries in Eastern Europe and the Southern Mediterranean, Central
Asia and the Russian Federation, with the HEREs acting as policy advisors in their home
countries on higher education modernisation issues.
Their mandate is to support policy development in their respective countries by supporting
modernisation reform processes and strategies in higher education; support policy dialogue
with the EU in the field of higher education and in particular in relation to the Bologna
Process and coordination with the various policy platforms established under the Erasmus+
programme or other potential initiatives established by, and under the guidance of, the
European Commission; support Erasmus+ by disseminating their results and outcomes,
notably best practices and innovative initiatives and exploiting them for modernisation and
development purposes.
The activities of the individual HEREs are financed and coordinated locally by the National
Erasmus+ Offices (NEOs). This activity provides the necessary mechanism for the
coordination and training of the network as a whole.
The network of National Focal Points (ENFPs) will be a support structure to provide
guidance, practical information and assistance on all aspects of participation in Erasmus+ in
the field of higher education, youth, vocational education and training and sport in third
countries not associated to the programme where National Erasmus+ Offices do not exist.
This activity will mainly cover coordination and transnational activities targeting training of
focal points. Besides the EU Delegation, the ENFP is a focal point in the country for all
actors, potential applicants, beneficiaries and other stakeholders as regards the EU
cooperation activities under the Erasmus+ programme.
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EACEA 4 600 000
7. OTHER ACTIONS
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The cooperation with the Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC) will be continued
throughout 2022, by means of Administrative Agreements concluded with DG EAC and DG
EMPL.
Priority will be given to collaboration with JRC in all areas where they have a specific
competence and expertise. JRC will provide technical support to EAC’s and EMPL's
monitoring and analytical capacity, supporting the engagement and innovation in the
education and training sectors towards smart-specialisation, transformation, sustainability and
transition to climate neutrality, also in line with the European Skills Agenda, the Digital
Education Action Plan and the European Education Area. JRC will also provide evidence-
based policy support to DG EAC and EMPL on harnessing the potential of digital
technologies to innovate and open education and training systems (including on non-formal
and informal learning). This includes the development, improvement, validation and
implementation of competence reference frameworks (Entrepreneurship and Digital
Competence, Education for climate change, environmental issues, clean energy transition and
sustainable development), self-assessment tools (notably the SELFIE tools to support for
digital capacity of education and training stakeholders, including the new SELFIE for
Teachers tool, as well as SELFIE for work based leaning), mechanisms for recognition of
competences and credentials across countries. Activities will also cover the continuation of
the Higher Education and Smart Specialisation (HESS) to enhance HEIs’ contribution to
innovation and regional development.
Further, it will provide analytical support in the area of education and training policies and
governance, including the delivery of studies, technical reports, technical briefs, specialised
expertise, as well as the organisation of symposiums, workshops and/or other presentations.
The JRC will continue to provide input for the Education and Training Monitor and the Joint
Employment Report.
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JEAN MONNET ACTIONS
a) Jean Monnet Actions in the field of Higher Education: Modules, Chairs and Centres
of Excellence
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 4.01, 4.02
The action covers Jean Monnet “Teaching and Research” Modules, Jean Monnet Chairs and
Jean Monnet Centres of Excellence. They aim at promoting excellence in teaching and
research in the field of European Union studies worldwide and also foster the dialogue
between the academic world and the society, reaching out to a wider public, generating
knowledge in support of EU policy-making, and strengthen the role of the EU within Europe
and in a globalised world.
Applicants targeted by this call are higher education institutions established in any country of
the world. Successful applicants from third countries not associated to the programme having
a earmarked budget from Heading 6 will be supported by the specific budget allocation.
96
Implementation Indicative amount (EUR)
Applicants targeted by this call are higher education institutions established in an EU Member
State or third country associated to the programme.
The indicative budget for thematic networks in Higher Education is EUR 1 000 000 on EU
internal policy and EUR 1 200 000 on EU external policy.
Jean Monnet Networks in other fields of education and training will foster the creation
and development of networks of schools and VET institutions that aim to exchange good
practices, share experiences on both content and methodologies and build knowledge in
teaching European issues. Networks should in particular focus on bringing facts and
knowledge about the EU to their learners in an innovative and creative way.
Applicants targeted by this call are schools and vocational training institutes established in an
EU Member State or third country associated to the programme.
The indicative budget for networks in other fields of education and training is
EUR 2 000 000.
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In conformity with Article 195 (d) FR which is applicable to grants to bodies identified in the
Regulation and according to Article 8 (c) of the Erasmus+ Regulation, support will be given
to the following institutions pursuing an aim of European interest:
College of Europe, Bruges;
European University Institute (EUI), Florence: out of the overall amount of this grant,
EUR 7 700 000 will be allocated to the Florence School of European and Transnational
Governance;
the Academy of European Law, Trier;
the European Institute of Public Administration (EIPA), Maastricht;
the European Agency for Special Needs and Inclusive Education, Odense;
the International Centre for European Training (CIFE), Nice;
College of Europe, Natolin.
Eligible applications for the annual operating grants will be assessed on the basis of a detailed
annual work programme, against aspects such as the relevance of the work programme, as well as
its quality and implementation, but also the clarity of the budget and links to the activities
proposed and the impact and dissemination.
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SPORT
KEY ACTION 2
In addition to priorities applying to all sectors, the following specific priorities are applicable
for cooperation partnerships in the field of sport:
Encouraging healthy lifestyles for all, including through awareness raising of the
benefits of healthy and active lifestyles, and promoting the participation in sport
and physical activity, as well as their contribution to health;
Promoting integrity and values in sport;
Promoting education in and through sport;
Combating violence and tackling racism, discrimination and intolerance in
sport.
While the aim for this action is to strive for a balanced representation of the above mentioned
priorities, taking into account the available budget and the quality of submitted applications, a
particular focus will be given in 2022 to the priority “Encouraging healthy lifestyles for all”.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: cooperation partnerships are open to any public or
private organisation active in the fields of sport. Applicants must be established in an EU
Member State or third country associated to the programme.
99
b) Partnerships for Cooperation: Small-scale partnerships
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 6.02
The action “Small-scale partnerships in the fields of education, training, youth and sport” as
described in this Work Programme is implemented under direct management in case of
applications submitted for projects in the field of sport.
To be funded, small cooperation Partnerships must address at least one of the following
priorities:
Priorities applying to all Erasmus+ sectors:
In addition to priorities applying to all sectors, the following specific priorities are applicable
for cooperation partnerships in the field of sport:
Encouraging healthy lifestyles for all, including through awareness raising of the
benefits of healthy and active lifestyles, and promoting the participation in sport
and physical activity, as well as their contribution to health;
Promoting integrity and values in sport;
Promoting education in and through sport;
Combating violence and tackling racism, discrimination and intolerance in
sport.
While the aim for this action is to strive for a balanced representation of the priorities of the
above mentioned priorities, taking into account the available budget and the quality of
submitted applications, a particular focus will be given in 2022 to the priority “Encouraging
healthy lifestyles for all”.
Type of applicants targeted by this action: small-scale partnerships are open to any public or
private organisation active in the fields sport. Applicants must be established in an EU
Member State or third country associated to the programme.
100
This action support the preparation, organisation and follow-up of not-for-profit sport events,
organised either in one single country or in several countries by not-for-profit organisations or
public bodies active in the field of sport.
Applicants targeted by this call are any public body or organisation active in the field of sport.
Applicants must be established in an EU Member State or in a third country associated to the
programme.
The action will support international cooperation projects based on multilateral partnerships
between organisations active in the field of sport in EU Member States, third countries
associated to the programme and third countries not associated to the programme. The aim is
to support sport activities and policy development in third countries not associated to the
programme to promote values, social inclusion, social cohesion as well as education through
sport. Specifically the action intends to: raise the capacity of grassroots sport organisations;
promote grassroots sport activities; promote social inclusion through sport; emphasise mutual
promotion of values; foster cooperation across different regions of the world through joint
initiatives.
Type of participating organisations in this action: grassroots sport organisations and other
public or private organisations active in the sport field (NGOs, municipalities and local
authorities, schools, universities and other educational institutions, etc.). Applicants must be
established in an EU Member State or third country associated to the programme, or a third
country not associated targeted by this action.
KEY ACTION 3
The CoE and the Commission mutually support the implementation of gender mainstreaming
principles in close cooperation with public authorities responsible for sport from all over
Europe, to close the gap between the de jure equality with the de facto inequality in sport.
101
They will promote gender equality and fight against gender based violence in sport and also
monitor the implementation of such principles and the commitments of the key stakeholders.
Other fields of cooperation may be initiated depending on the identified areas of emerging
priorities between the two institutions (fighting match-fixing, anti-doping, ambassadors
network, etc.).
The work in 2022 will focus on data collection on gender equality in sport, and on
establishing indicators. The production of deliverables such as studies or other support
activities to help design evidence-based policies is also planned.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to the Council of Europe (CoE) via the
conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in accordance with
Articles 62 (1)(c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 156(1) of the FR.
The budget implementation tasks will be entrusted to the World Health Organisation (WHO)
via the conclusion of Contribution Agreements under indirect management mode in
accordance with Articles 62 (1)(a, c), 110 (3)(f), 154 and 156(1) of the FR.
a) Presidency events
Index references in budget table (WPI): 6.10
102
Grants will be awarded to the governments of France, Czech Republic and Sweden (or bodies
designated by them) to organise during their respective Presidencies of the Council of the EU
or in preparation thereof of conferences, seminars, meetings of directors-generals on priority
policy topics, together with associated activities for the exploitation of project and Programme
results. The main outcomes expected from Presidency events are policy guidance, orientations,
conclusions and messages which will serve as inputs to promote European policy approaches, to
inform Presidency policy proposals, to improve the cooperation between the EU and the Member
States and to prepare future policy initiatives in the field of sport.
The Presidency is considered as a de jure monopoly because it plays a unique role to foster policy
cooperation, define priorities and follow-up the progress and results achieved in the field of sport
(Article 195 (c) FR).
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awareness-raising and communication activities on the value of sport and physical activity
in relation to the personal, social and professional development of individuals;
activities to promote synergies between the field of sport and the fields of health,
education, training and youth conferences, seminars, meetings, and events;
support to the organisation of an EU-wide (symbolic) simultaneous activity in the capitals
of all participating countries.
The grant will also aim at co-financing the costs linked to the national coordination of
activities organised by others (sport clubs, federations and associations), national
communication about the European Week of Sport and support activities. In all the activities
cooperation with Eastern Partnership and Western Balkans regions should be encouraged.
The grant is subject to approval of an action plan and an estimated budget. Each national
coordination body can receive financial support of EUR 160 000.
3. PROCUREMENTS
a) Evidence-based activities
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One of the main activities foreseen for the dialogue with stakeholders is the annual EU Sport
Forum. This event is gathering in particular representatives from, public authorities, key sport
organisations and EU institutions. In 2022, to further support the European Year of Youth,
new ideas will be formulated through a HealthyLifeStyle4All Ideas Lab. Other ad-hoc
meetings, seminars, conferences and communication activities, including those related to
awards, to the development of the European Week of Sport and to the promotion of grassroots
sport relevant to ensure optimal dialogue with sport stakeholders and getting their views may
also be envisaged.
4. PRIZES
EACEA 45 000
105
b) #BeActive Awards
Index reference in budget table (WPI): 6.31
The aim of this initiative would be to reward the best projects that have successfully promoted
physical activity. Projects have to be presented by National Coordinating Bodies or Partners
of the European Week of Sport. Besides rewarding specific organisations, this competition
aims at rewarding and giving visibility to initiatives and projects which have efficiently
contributed to promoting sports and physical activity. The projects will not necessarily be
transnational nor EU-supported.
This competition would concern any organisation, public authority or individual which has
successfully developed a sport project aimed at promoting sport and physical activity in the
spirit of the European Week of Sport. The projects will not necessarily be transnational
projects nor will necessarily be EU-supported.
EACEA 60 000
106
MANAGEMENT FEES OF NATIONAL AGENCIES
1. ACTIONS IMPLEMENTED UNDER INDIRECT MANAGEMENT
107
PART III - BUDGET
This part of the Work Programme gives an indication of the funds which will be available in
2022 to finance activities supported by the Erasmus+ Programme.
The total available appropriations foreseen under the 2022 Work Programme for the EU
Member States, countries belonging to the European Economic Area, other countries
participating to the Programme (North Macedonia, Turkey, Serbia) amounts to EUR
4 016 268 500.
These available appropriations are distributed as follows (see table below for details):
appropriations from the budget of the Union and under Heading 2: EUR 3 366 367 154;
appropriations from the budget of the Union and under Heading 6: EUR 356 866 667;
appropriations arising from the participation of the EFTA/EEA countries: EUR
84 119 315 under Heading 2 and EUR 8 957 353 under Heading 6;
appropriations corresponding to estimated internal assigned revenues: EUR 40 650 000;
appropriations corresponding to estimated external assigned revenues: EUR 159 308 011.
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Tables 1 – Erasmus+ 2022: available appropriations
External assigned
Internal assigned
2022 Revised Budget Budget lines EU Budget EFTA/EEA revenues (Other 2022 Draft Budget 2022 revised budget
revenues
countries)
07 03 01 01 2.256.129.578 56.628.852 95.549.196 13.400.000 2.367.840.474 2.421.707.626
E&T&JMO
07 03 01 02 678.800.959 17.037.904 28.668.511 2.100.000 720.257.374 726.607.374
Youth 07 03 02 351.400.945 8.820.164 17.446.891 4.000.000 363.682.139 381.668.000
Heading 2
Sport 07 03 03 65.035.672 1.632.395 3.303.433 150.000 67.827.982 70.121.500
07 02 13 15.000.000 15.000.000
Total (H2) 3.366.367.154 84.119.315 144.968.031 19.650.000 3.519.607.969 3.615.104.500
NDICI-Global Europe 14 02 01 50 296.666.667 7.446.333 11.674.000 17.000.000 312.113.000 332.787.000
Heading 6
IPA III 15 02 01 02 60.200.000 1.511.020 2.665.980 4.000.000 63.711.020 68.377.000
Total (H6) 356.866.667 8.957.353 14.339.980 21.000.000 375.824.020 401.164.000
TOTAL 3.723.233.821 93.076.668 159.308.011 40.650.000 3.895.431.990 4.016.268.501
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2. DISTRIBUTION OF AVAILABLE APPROPRIATIONS BY ACTIONS AND FIELDS – BUDGET
AND PROGRAMMING TABLES
The budget and programming tables below shows the distribution of available appropriations
among the Key Actions and actions funded by budget lines 07 03 01 01, 07 03 01 02,
07 03 02, 07 03 03, 07 02 13, 14 02 01 50 and 15 02 01 02 taking into account the amounts
adopted in the EU-Budget, the financial contributions from EFTA/EEA and from other
countries for their participation in the Programme, as well as a forecast of internal assigned
revenues from recoveries.
The overall allocation of funds to the actions of the Programme is established by the
provisions of Article 17 of the Regulation, which establishes allocations per policy field and
other expenditure covered by the Programme. The percentages in the Regulation are set and
should be respected for the entire programming period 2021-2027. These shares have
therefore governed the allocation of funds at the annual level for the year 2022.
The thresholds of budget allocation under Erasmus+ are as follows:
Erasmus+ 2021-2027
% of total % of E&T budget
budget
a. Education and Training 83%
1) Higher education Min. 34.6%
2) Vocational Education and Training Min. 21.5%
3) School education Min. 15.2%
4) Adult education Min. 5.8%
5) Jean Monnet Min. 1.8%
Horizontal activities Min. 17%
Flexibility margin 4.1%
b. Youth 10.3%
c. Sport 1.9%
d. Operational costs of National
Min. 3.3%
Agencies
e. Programme support 1.5%
It should be noted, however, that in line with the Regulation, these percentages of the total
budget are fixed for the entire programming period 2021 – 2027. Therefore, for a given year
of implementation of the Programme, they do not need to be respected in full (i.e. because of
reprogramming or change in political priorities), while the trend will have to be respected for
the overall duration of the Programme.
110
Legend:
AA: Administrative Arrangement
APEL: Aw ard Procedure For European Label or Charter
CFP: Grants aw arded w ith a call for proposals
DB: Grants to bodies identified by a basic act - Art 195 (d) FR
FPA: Specific grant aw arded under a Framew ork Partnership Agreement
IM: Indirect management
MF: Management fees aw arded to the National Agencies
MON: Grants to bodies w ith a de jure or de facto monopoly - Art 195 (c) FR
NA: National Agencies
N/A: not applicable
PP: Public Procurement
PR: Prize
SE: Experts - Art. 237 FR
SPE: Grants for actions w ith specific caracteristics - Art 195 (f) FR
WPI: Work Programme Index
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Table 2 - Key Action 1 - Budget lines Heading 2: 07 03 01 01, 07 03 01 02, 07 02 13 (E&T), Heading 6: 14 02 01 50, 15 02 01 02
Implementation
WPI Actions Heading 2022 Draft Budget 2022 Revised Budget Implemeting body
mode
Mobility projects:
1.01 971.008.760 996.151.996
Higher education students and staff 2 IM NA
0 15.000.000
1.02 VET learners and staff 2 471.955.277 483.985.611 IM NA
1.03 School education learners and staff 2 353.135.806 362.053.066 IM NA
1.04 Adult education learners and staff 2 83.552.396 85.678.719 IM NA
Mobility project for Higher education students and staff from/to third countries not associated to
1.05 6 178.943.695 194.186.314 IM NA
the programme - Heading 6
1.10 Accreditations in the field of VET, school education and adult education 2 0 IM NA
1.11 Higher Education Mobility Consortium Accreditations 2 0 IM NA
1.12 Virtual Exchanges in Higher Education and Youth - Heading 6 6 6.301.364 CFP EACEA
1.30 Erasmus Charter for Higher Education (ECHE) 2 0 APEL EACEA
Sub-total KA1 (Heading 2: 07 03 01 01 ) 1.879.652.239 1.927.869.391
Sub-total KA1 (Heading 2: 07 02 13) 15.000.000
Sub-total KA1 (Heading 6) 185.245.059 200.487.678
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Table 3 - Key Action 2 - Budget lines Heading 2: 07 03 01 01, 07 03 01 02 (E&T), Heading 6: 14 02 01 50, 15 02 01 02
Implementation
WPI Actions Heading 2022 Draft Budget 2022 Revised Budget Implemeting body
mode
Partnerships for Cooperation: Cooperation partnerships in the fields of education and training
2.01 Partnerships Higher Education 2 81.741.774 IM NA
2.02 Partnerships Vocational Education and Training 2 70.066.149 IM NA
2.03 Partnerships School Education 2 88.228.992 IM NA
2.04 Partnerships Adult Education 2 37.551.320 IM NA
2.05 Small-scale partnerships Vocational Education and Training 2 20.000.000 IM NA
2.06 Small-scale partnerships School Education 2 20.000.000 IM NA
2.07 Small-scale partnerships Adult Education 2 20.000.000 IM NA
2.08 Partnerships for Cooperation in the fields of education and training – European NGOs 2 5.000.000 CFP EACEA
2.09 Partnerships for Excellence: European Universities 2 272.000.000 CFP EACEA
2.10 Partnerships for Excellence: Erasmus Mundus action 2 110.000.000 CFP EACEA
Erasmus Mundus Joint Master's Degrees-Additional partnerships focused on external priorities
2.11 6 26.641.034 CFP EACEA
for targeted regions of the w orld - Heading 6
2.12 Partnerships for Excellence: Centres for Vocational Excellence 2 48.000.000 CFP EACEA
2.13 Partnerships for Excellence: Erasmus+ Teacher Academies 2 15.000.000 22.500.000 CFP EACEA
2.14 Partnerships for Innovation: Alliances 2 62.000.000 CFP EACEA
2.15 Partnerships for Innovation: Forw ard-Looking Projects 2 46.000.000 CFP EACEA
2.16 Capacity building in Higher Education – Heading 6 6 103.108.194 104.055.415 CFP EACEA
2.17 Capacity building in VET - Heading 6 6 26.521.153 CFP EACEA
2.19 6 900.000
eTw inning National Support Organisations DB EACEA
2.20 2 22.300.000
2.21 EPALE (Electronic Platform for Adult Learning in Europe) - National Support Services (NSS) 2 14.400.000 DB EACEA
2.30 EPALE (Electronic Platform for Adult Learning in Europe) Central Support Service 2 1.270.000 PP EACEA
2.31 Europass platform and related tools 2 5.000.000 PP EMPL
2.32 School education platform and eTw inning Central Support Services 2 3.800.000 PP EACEA
2.33 Erasmus+ HE tools (European Student Card Initiative) 2 4.000.000 PP EAC/EACEA
2.34 School Education, VET, Adult Education tools (Erasmus w ithout paper) 2 4.000.000 2.000.000 PP EAC/EACEA
2.35 Erasmus Mundus Joint Master’s Degrees – Support Structure 2 5.000.000 PP EACEA
2.40 IT services for Erasmus+ platforms 2 530.000 AA EACEA
Sub-total KA2 (Heading 2: 07 03 01 01, 07 03 01 02) 955.888.235 961.388.235
Sub-total KA2 (Heading 6) 157.170.381 158.117.602
113
Table 4 - Key Action 3 - Budget lines Heading 2: 07 03 01 01, 07 03 01 02 (E&T), Heading 6: 14 02 01 50, 15 02 01 02
Implementation
WPI Actions Heading 2022 Draft Budget 2022 Revised Budget Implemeting body
mode
3.01 Training and Cooperation Activities in the fields of Education and Training 2 20.000.000 IM NA
3.02 SALTO Resource Centres in the fields of Education and Training 2 900.000 IM NA
3.03 National Teams to support the implementation of EU VET tools 2 3.000.000 IM NA
3.04 Cooperation w ith the Council of Europe 2 1.700.000 IM CoE
3.05 Cooperation w ith the OECD 2 2.650.000 IM OECD
3.06 Cooperation w ith UNESCO 2 0 1.000.000 IM UNESCO
3.10 Presidency events in the fields of education and training: conferences, meetings of ministers 2 850.000 EAC
MON
3.11 and directors-general 2 200.000 EMPL
3.19 National Academic Recognition Centres (NARIC) 2 2.000.000 3.000.000 DB EACEA
3.20 Teaching and Learning International Study TALIS 2 4.480.000 MON EACEA
3.21 National Erasmus+ Offices (NEOs) – Heading 6 6 6.840.000 SPE EACEA
3.30 European policy netw ork on teachers and school leaders 2 300.000 FPA EACEA
European policy netw ork in the field of education of children and young people w ith a migrant
3.31 2 300.000 CFP EAC/EACEA
background
3.32 Civil Society Cooperation: Education and Training 2 2.800.000 CFP EACEA
3.39 European policy experimentation in higher education 2 0 2.000.000 CFP EACEA
3.40 Innovation in Education (e.g. HEInnovate) 2 1.000.000 PP EAC
3.41 Supporting implementation of the Digital Education Action Plan and the Digital Education Hub 2 3.100.000 PP EAC/EACEA
3.42 1.650.000 EAC
Expertise on Education and Training 2 PP
3.43 200.000 EMPL
3.44 250.000 EAC
Exchanges of experience and good practice, and peer counselling 2 PP
3.45 400.000 EMPL
3.46 Country-specific expertise: netw ork of national experts in Member States 2 300.000 PP EMPL
3.47 2 1.250.000 EAC
Studies PP
3.48 2 600.000 EMPL
3.49 Academic netw orks (EENEE, NESET) 2 400.000 PP EAC
3.50 Prospective platform 2 200.000 PP EAC
3.53 Transparency and recognition of skills and qualifications 2 1.050.000 PP EMPL
3.54 2 1.700.000 EAC
Policy-related and policy dialogue conferences PP
3.55 2 400.000 EMPL
114
3.56 International policy dialogue 2 1.000.000 PP EAC
3.57 University Business Cooperation 2 700.000 PP EAC
3.58 2 1.500.000
International Student and Alumni Netw ork Erasmus+ PP EACEA
3.59 6 2.166.667
3.61 2 1.000.000 PP
Meetings w ith grant-holders and other stakeholders EACEA
3.62 6 350.000 PP
3.63 Education Summit 2 500.000 600.000 PP EAC
3.64 Dissemination and communication activities 2 4.500.000 3.600.000 PP EAC
3.65 Information, aw areness-raising activities and events in the field of multilingualism diversity and 2 400.000 PP EAC
3.66 inclusive education 2 700.000 PP EAC-DGT
3.67 European Education Area Portal 2 2.500.000 PP EAC
3.69 Interim evaluation of the Erasmus+ Programme 2 1.500.000 PP EAC
3.70 Netw ork of National Teams of Higher Education Reform Experts (HEREs) - Heading 6 6 1.500.000 PP EACEA
3.71 Erasmus+ national contact points (ENCPs) – Heading 6 6 4.600.000 PP EACEA
3.72 Rationalisation of Higher Education monitoring tools 2 1.600.000 2.500.000 PP EACEA
3.80 2 2.400.000 2.800.000
Selection and implementation SE EACEA
3.81 6 2.524.620
3.90 2.050.000 EAC
Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC) Administrative arrangements 2 AA
3.91 430.000 EMPL
Sub-total KA3 (Heading 2: 07 03 01 01, 07 03 01 02) 72.460.000 76.960.000
Sub-total KA3 (Heading 6) 17.981.287
115
Table 5 – Jean Monnet Actions - Budget lines Heading 2: 07 03 01 02 (E&T), Heading 6: 14 02 01 50, 15 02 01 02
116
Table 6 –Management Fees - Budget line Heading 2: 07 03 01 01 (E&T), Heading 6: 14 02 01 50, 15 02 01 02
Management Fees
Implementation
WPI Actions Heading 2022 Draft Budget 2022 Revised Budget Implementing body
mode
Table 7 – Total budget - Budget lines Heading 2: 07 03 01 01, 07 03 01 02, 07 02 13 (E&T), Heading 6: 14 02 01 50, 15 02 01 02
117
Table 8 –Budget lines Heading 2: 07 03 02 (Youth), Heading 6: 14 02 01 50, 15 02 01 02
Youth
Implementation
WPI Actions Heading 2022 Draft Budget 2022 Revised Budget Implemeting body
mode
118
Table 9 –Budget lines Heading 2: 07 03 03 (Sport), Heading 6: 14 02 01 50, 15 02 01 02
SPORT
Implementation Implemeting
WPI Actions Heading 2022 Draft Budget 2022 Revised Budget
mode body
119
3. BREAKDOWN BY COUNTRY OF THE HEADING 2 FUNDS ALLOCATED TO THE NATIONAL
AGENCIES
Standard criteria
In application of the Regulation, the 4 criteria used for the allocation of funds for grant support
indirectly managed by the National Agencies are the following:
a) Country Population;
b) Cost of Living;
c) Distance between capitals;
d) Performance.
The relative weight of the criteria is calculated as follows:
Education and Training:
Minimum allocation of 10% of the budget for each action is applied. The criteria a) to c) account
for the allocation of 80% of funds. The criterion of past performance d) accounts for the remaining
10%.
Youth:
Minimum allocation of 20% of the budget for each action is applied. The criteria a) to c) account
for the allocation of 70% of funds. The criterion of past performance d) accounts for the remaining
10%.
- In order to guarantee that there are no excessive imbalances in the annual budget allocated
to countries from one year to another, a correction mechanism is applied to the allocations
resulting from the pure application of the above-mentioned criteria. In addition, for Key
Action 2, minima allocations are applied: For Cooperation Partnerships: minimum of EUR
400 000 for each country;
- For Small-scale Partnerships: minimum of EUR 120 000 for each country.
For those countries associated to the Programme and identified in Article 19.1 (b) of the Erasmus+
Programme Regulation, the allocation of funds is calculated on the basis of the financial
contribution paid by the countries, coupled with a correction mechanism. The correction mechanism
aims to avoid substantial reductions in the annual budget allocated from one year to the next and to
minimise excessive imbalances in the level of funds allocated.
120
Table 10: Country allocation – Education and training budget line (Heading 2) – general breakdown
Total E&T
Country
Total
KA 1 KA2 KA1+KA2
BE 57.517.215 8.910.039 66.427.254
BG 35.530.809 6.750.799 42.281.608
CZ 52.256.794 8.641.893 60.898.687
DK 30.753.561 5.415.968 36.169.529
DE 269.314.046 43.231.125 312.545.171
EE 17.932.374 3.673.486 21.605.860
EL 48.728.438 8.910.933 57.639.371
ES 181.857.193 32.390.372 214.247.565
FR 228.891.412 35.541.193 264.432.605
HR 24.311.645 4.163.935 28.475.580
IE 28.178.817 5.237.779 33.416.596
IT 204.757.509 33.046.756 237.804.265
CY 9.247.577 2.608.366 11.855.943
LV 21.658.572 4.293.228 25.951.800
LT 27.554.970 5.136.020 32.690.990
LU 5.296.865 2.264.524 7.561.389
HU 47.604.085 8.179.194 55.783.279
MT 5.747.507 2.282.191 8.029.698
NL 69.372.492 11.351.966 80.724.458
AT 42.798.721 7.174.516 49.973.237
PL 140.456.175 25.232.354 165.688.529
PT 53.303.182 8.981.352 62.284.534
RO 78.683.609 13.646.701 92.330.310
SI 20.893.183 3.951.361 24.844.544
SK 33.349.405 5.772.055 39.121.460
FI 36.338.148 6.101.472 42.439.620
SE 43.362.571 7.998.850 51.361.421
IS 6.330.056 2.390.301 8.720.357
LI 1.596.371 2.141.813 3.738.184
NO 26.610.428 5.264.386 31.874.814
EU30 1.850.233.729 320.684.928 2.170.918.657
- - -
TR 69.998.315 12.983.307 82.981.622
MK 2.778.915 1.960.000 4.738.915
RS 4.858.434 1.960.000 6.818.434
EU33 1.927.869.392 337.588.235 2.265.457.627
121
Table 11: Country allocation – Education and training budget line (Heading 2) – breakdown by field
Higher education VET School Education Adult Education
KA2 KA2 KA2 Small- KA2 KA2 Small-
Country Total Total Country
KA1 KA2 KA1 Cooperation KA2 Small-scale KA1 Cooperation scale Total KA1 Cooperation scale Total
KA1+KA2 KA1+KA2
Partnerships Partnerships Partnerships Partnerships KA1+KA2 Partnerships Partnerships KA1+KA2
BE 29.808.597 2.121.650 31.930.247 14.382.925 1.793.699 516.114 16.692.738 10.776.186 2.432.774 547.396 13.756.356 2.549.507 965.292 533.114 4.047.913 BE
BG 18.433.898 1.591.961 20.025.859 8.874.210 1.412.704 384.082 10.670.996 6.646.997 1.819.502 407.310 8.873.809 1.575.704 738.676 396.564 2.710.944 BG
CZ 26.570.294 2.061.593 28.631.887 13.299.719 1.732.197 498.418 15.530.334 10.026.066 2.363.139 531.727 12.920.932 2.360.715 937.213 517.606 3.815.534 CZ
DK 15.942.673 1.288.965 17.231.638 7.701.963 1.143.727 310.953 9.156.643 5.743.877 1.432.590 320.697 7.497.164 1.365.048 597.997 321.039 2.284.084 DK
DE* 139.537.156 10.469.193 150.006.349 67.396.160 8.927.093 2.568.660 78.891.913 50.438.460 11.444.726 2.575.165 64.458.351 11.942.271 4.668.150 2.578.138 19.188.559 DE
EE 9.310.283 956.464 10.266.747 4.474.694 736.237 200.166 5.411.097 3.353.705 948.294 212.283 4.514.282 793.692 403.448 216.594 1.413.734 EE
EL 25.251.130 2.147.254 27.398.384 12.217.768 1.820.120 523.717 14.561.605 9.095.474 2.372.764 533.893 12.002.131 2.164.067 974.813 538.372 3.677.252 EL
ES 92.546.879 7.746.145 100.293.024 46.018.649 6.522.816 1.876.859 54.418.324 35.067.028 8.824.913 1.985.684 45.877.625 8.224.637 3.500.622 1.933.333 13.658.592 ES
FR 118.508.807 8.620.598 127.129.405 57.402.660 7.350.794 2.115.100 66.868.554 42.819.869 9.377.830 2.110.094 54.307.793 10.160.076 3.843.873 2.122.904 16.126.853 FR
HR 12.600.070 1.168.761 13.768.831 6.091.843 817.377 222.226 7.131.446 4.540.067 1.057.739 236.783 5.834.589 1.079.665 430.130 230.919 1.740.714 HR
IE 14.368.465 1.240.482 15.608.947 7.129.257 1.083.602 294.607 8.507.466 5.411.028 1.416.615 317.121 7.144.764 1.270.067 576.079 309.273 2.155.419 IE
IT 106.007.500 8.072.964 114.080.464 51.364.438 6.839.226 1.967.903 60.171.567 38.296.780 8.635.451 1.943.052 48.875.283 9.088.791 3.599.963 1.988.197 14.676.951 IT
CY 4.793.989 678.417 5.472.406 2.313.032 523.248 142.259 2.978.539 1.729.706 595.315 133.266 2.458.287 410.850 400.000 135.861 946.711 CY
LV 11.089.955 1.063.503 12.153.458 5.477.912 887.803 241.373 6.607.088 4.119.585 1.133.677 253.782 5.507.044 971.119 463.991 249.099 1.684.209 LV
LT 14.038.917 1.247.822 15.286.739 6.987.222 1.058.965 304.704 8.350.891 5.285.152 1.348.481 303.420 6.937.053 1.243.680 562.158 310.470 2.116.308 LT
LU 2.748.068 639.981 3.388.049 1.321.598 453.251 123.229 1.898.078 992.108 403.164 120.000 1.515.272 235.091 400.000 124.899 759.990 LU
HU 24.720.276 1.983.882 26.704.158 11.884.206 1.691.659 486.754 14.062.619 8.894.868 2.158.146 485.602 11.538.616 2.104.734 884.601 488.550 3.477.885 HU
MT 2.983.554 658.810 3.642.364 1.432.774 451.416 122.731 2.006.921 1.076.449 405.168 120.000 1.601.617 254.730 400.000 124.066 778.796 MT
NL 35.951.790 2.744.283 38.696.073 17.310.408 2.369.388 681.762 20.361.558 13.030.046 2.985.340 671.728 16.687.114 3.080.248 1.223.659 675.806 4.979.713 NL
AT 22.166.742 1.715.492 23.882.234 10.719.504 1.462.802 420.903 12.603.209 8.013.280 1.942.302 437.035 10.392.617 1.899.194 770.467 425.515 3.095.176 AT
PL 72.683.268 6.145.348 78.828.616 35.275.950 5.200.871 1.496.486 41.973.307 26.257.253 6.617.952 1.489.098 34.364.303 6.239.703 2.758.904 1.523.695 10.522.302 PL
PT 27.626.835 2.197.128 29.823.963 13.306.112 1.861.396 535.593 15.703.101 10.005.118 2.357.115 530.372 12.892.605 2.365.117 966.157 533.591 3.864.865 PT
RO 40.757.598 3.249.627 44.007.225 19.714.445 2.749.243 791.060 23.254.748 14.722.507 3.724.841 838.122 19.285.470 3.489.059 1.477.700 816.108 5.782.867 RO
SI 10.848.090 982.570 11.830.660 5.211.133 816.464 221.978 6.249.575 3.909.087 1.042.783 233.435 5.185.305 924.873 425.629 228.502 1.579.004 SI
SK 17.316.226 1.400.160 18.716.386 8.324.511 1.193.918 342.980 9.861.409 6.233.486 1.523.149 342.722 8.099.357 1.475.182 624.323 344.803 2.444.308 SK
FI 18.822.245 1.481.639 20.303.884 9.101.399 1.235.736 355.568 10.692.703 6.802.516 1.619.624 364.430 8.786.570 1.611.988 672.864 371.611 2.656.463 FI
SE 22.267.331 1.935.680 24.203.011 10.926.020 1.660.482 459.820 13.046.322 8.228.466 2.118.372 476.652 10.823.490 1.940.754 868.298 479.546 3.288.598 SE
IS 3.286.555 672.400 3.958.955 1.577.091 464.467 126.278 2.167.836 1.185.929 479.554 120.000 1.785.483 280.480 400.000 127.602 808.082 IS
LI 827.921 581.813 1.409.734 399.117 400.000 120.000 919.117 298.497 400.000 120.000 818.497 70.837 400.000 120.000 590.837 LI
NO 13.637.487 1.241.378 14.878.865 6.704.793 1.099.835 299.020 8.103.648 5.071.991 1.419.963 317.870 6.809.824 1.196.157 576.709 309.611 2.082.477 NO
EU30 955.452.601 78.105.963 1.033.558.564 464.341.512 65.760.536 18.751.303 548.853.351 348.071.582 84.401.283 19.078.739 451.551.604 82.368.034 35.511.716 19.075.388 136.955.138 EU30
- - - - - - - -
TR 36.748.876 2.835.811 39.584.687 17.711.260 3.505.613 1.008.697 22.225.570 12.563.171 3.027.709 681.261 16.272.141 2.975.008 1.239.604 684.612 4.899.224 TR
MK 1.441.767 400.000 1.841.767 712.269 400.000 120.000 1.232.269 505.236 400.000 120.000 1.025.236 119.642 400.000 120.000 639.642 MK
RS 2.508.752 400.000 2.908.752 1.220.570 400.000 120.000 1.740.570 913.077 400.000 120.000 1.433.077 216.034 400.000 120.000 736.034 RS
EU33 996.151.996 81.741.774 1.077.893.770 483.985.611 70.066.149 20.000.000 574.051.760 362.053.066 88.228.992 20.000.000 470.282.058 85.678.719 37.551.320 20.000.000 143.230.039 EU33
122
Table 12: Country allocation - Youth budget line
Youth allocation
KA1
Country
KA1 Mobility KA1 Youth DiscoverEU KA2 Cooperation KA2 Sm all-scale Total KA3 DiscoverEU
projects - Total Participation Inclusion partnerships partnerships KA1+KA2 Learning Cycle
Action
123
4. BREAKDOWN (BY INSTRUMENT, GEOGRAPHIC AREA AND COUNTRY) OF THE HEADING 6
Mobility project for Higher education students and staff from/to third countries not
1.05 158.478.573 35.707.741 194.186.314
associated to the programme - Heading 6
1.12 Virtual Exchanges in Higher Education and Youth 5.240.264 1.061.100 6.301.364
Sub-total KA1 163.718.837 36.768.841 200.487.678
KEY ACTION (KA) 2: COOPERATION FOR INNOVATION AND THE EXCHANGE OF GOOD PRACTICES
124
Table 14: Country allocations – KA1 Mobility projects - Heading 6
NDICI - Global
Country Europe
IPA III Total H6
125
5. FUNDS AIMED AT CO-FINANCING THE MANAGEMENT COSTS OF NATIONAL AGENCIES:
126
6. FUNDS FOR THE ERASMUS+ TRAINING AND COOPERATION ACTIVITIES, NETWORKS AND
BODIES
The following tables indicate the breakdown of the budget (per country or per structure)
aimed at supporting the activities to be implemented by the networks of the Programme as
well as by other national bodies supported under Erasmus+.
Table 16: Training and Cooperation Activities in the fields of Education and Training and
Youth
TCAs - 2022
Country Total
E&T Youth
TCA
BE 528.433 700.848 1.229.281
BG 384.372 584.050 968.422
CZ 512.425 577.451 1.089.876
DK 309.096 433.810 742.906
DE 2.521.324 2.311.123 4.832.448
EE 211.100 389.141 600.240
EL 530.293 526.143 1.056.436
ES 1.922.027 1.669.862 3.591.889
FR 2.072.832 1.960.839 4.033.671
HR 241.104 417.465 658.569
IE 298.085 453.663 751.748
IT 1.972.839 1.809.241 3.782.081
CY 143.226 350.644 493.870
LV 250.390 387.469 637.858
LT 306.301 397.678 703.979
LU 124.777 267.422 392.198
HU 477.027 584.577 1.061.604
MT 124.356 242.483 366.839
NL 662.069 657.338 1.319.407
AT 421.466 525.608 947.073
PL 1.505.196 1.498.899 3.004.095
PT 531.157 657.927 1.189.083
RO 809.409 938.916 1.748.325
SI 230.451 367.549 598.001
SK 336.638 468.675 805.313
FI 363.209 404.743 767.952
SE 464.726 546.826 1.011.552
IS 130.790 242.551 373.341
LI 115.299 62.210 177.509
NO 299.696 410.153 709.849
EU30 18.800.111 20.845.303 39.645.414
127
Table 17: Other Erasmus+ networks and national bodies (E&T and Youth) – breakdown by
country
128
Table 19: SALTO Resource Centres – breakdown by structure
*There are or will be two SALTO Resource Centers (one in the Youth field and one in the Education and
training field) as far as ‘Inclusion and Diversity’ and ‘Training and cooperation’ are concerned.
129