The direct and final beneficiaries of the Recovery and Resilience Plan (PRR) received 36 million euros between 1 and 8 March, according to the latest monitoring report.
Until March 8, distributions to beneficiaries amounted to EUR 1,551 million, while until March 1 they amounted to EUR 1,515 million.
Payments now represent 9% of the total and PRR execution remains at 17%.
The government aims for an implementation of 32% in 2023, a percentage that can still change due to the reprogramming of the plan.
Public bodies (508 million euros), government companies (296 million euros), schools (217 million euros) and companies (183 million euros) stand out with the highest amounts paid.
This is followed by families (€130 million), municipalities and metropolitan areas (€108 million), higher education institutions (€59 million), solidarity and social economy institutions (€39 million) and the institutions of the scientific and technological system ( 11 million euros).
The approvals in turn amount to 12,231 million euros, representing 73% of the total.
Public bodies (4,032 million euros), companies (3,182 million euros), public companies (2,218 million euros) and municipalities and metropolitan areas (1,195 million euros) appear with the highest amounts.
Follow higher education institutions (614 million euros), institutions of the scientific and technological system (301 million euros) and institutions of solidarity and social economy (292 million euros).
With the lowest values are schools (253 million euros) and families (143 million euros).
The PRR has already received 153,083 applications and 97,082 have been approved, 712 more than the week before.
The total amount of the PRR (€16,644 million), managed by the structure of the Mission to Restore Portugal, is divided into three structuring dimensions: resilience (€11,125 million), climate transition (€3,059 million) and digital transition (€2,460 million). euros). million euros).
The three dimensions of the plan show a 100% hiring rate.
Of the total allocation, approximately EUR 13,900 million corresponds to grants and EUR 2,700 million to loans.
This plan, which runs until 2026, aims to implement a series of reforms and investments to restore economic growth.
This plan aims not only to repair the damage caused by covid-19, but also to support investment and create jobs.
Source: DN
