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  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 16/03/2016 - Bureau decision date: 08/12/2015
    Viide
    ECO/398-EESC-2016-00122-00-00-ac-tra
    Civil Society Organisations - GR III
    Greece
    EESC opinion: Structural Reform Support Programme for the period 2017 to 2020 and amending Regulations (EU) No 1303/2013 and (EU) No 1305/2013
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 16/03/2016 - Bureau decision date: 08/12/2015
    Viide
    ECO/397-EESC-2015-01-01-06712-00-01-ac-tra
    (Austria
    (Belgium

    The EESC welcomes the establishment of economic priority programmes for the euro area at the start of the European Semester. To achieve a recovery of growth and employment a mix of financial, taxation, budgetary, economic and social policies is needed. In contrast to the recommendation of the Commission, the focus of fiscal policy should be designed to be more expansionist than neutral. The EESC advocates the reduction of taxation on labour insofar as it does not threaten the financial sustainability of social protection systems. The EESC calls for a coordinated effort to create a more business-friendly environment for SMEs through better regulation, adequate financing and facilitation of exports to markets outside the EU. There is a particular need to open up new funding opportunities for micro-enterprises and start-ups.

    EESC opinion: Economic policy of the euro area
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 16/03/2016 - Bureau decision date: 10/11/2015
    Viide
    ECO/395-EESC-2015-01-01-06711-00-00-ac-tra
    (Austria
    (Ireland

    Competitiveness is not an end in itself. It is only a sensible objective if it improves people's well-being in practice. The EESC therefore recommends that an updated definition of competitiveness ("competitiveness 2.0") be used in future, taking into account "the ability of a country to deliver the beyond-GDP goals for its citizens". The EESC urges that future discussions refer not to "competitiveness boards" but to "boards for competitiveness, social cohesion and sustainability". The EESC asks the Commission to present concrete proposals on how the following necessary requirements with regards to these boards can be safeguarded: accountability, legitimacy and transparency; representation of balanced unbiased expertise; non-binding character of proposals of the boards; inclusion of the dual role of wages, both as a cost factor and as the main determinant of domestic demand.

    EESC opinion: Establishment of National Competitiveness Boards within the Euro Area
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 16/03/2016 - Bureau decision date: 10/11/2015
    Viide
    ECO/394-EESC-2015-01-01-06709-00-00-ac-tra
    (Italy

    The Commission communication on Steps towards completing EMU can provide a great opportunity to launch a debate at political level and with civil society to draw up conclusive proposals which go further than the current ones. It would be more useful to draw up a proposal for the European Semester as part of a comprehensive agreement on economic governance that goes beyond the status quo, changing macroconditionality and strengthening the Interparliamentary Conference. Democratic legitimacy is not tackled seriously by any of the Commission's operational proposals. The tripartite social dialogue could contribute to this matter. On the basis of its own roadmap, the EESC is committed to putting forward, possibly with the Commission, a plan on stage two (Completing EMU 2017-2025) to discuss these issues in the Member States, beginning with the euro area countries.

    EESC opinion: Steps towards Completing Economic and Monetary Union
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 09/12/2015
    Viide
    ECO/383-EESC-2015-02961-00-01-ac-tra
    Workers - GR II
    Romania
    Employers - GR I
    Portugal
    Plenary session number
    512
    -

    The EESC expresses its support for the Commission in combating the erosion of Member States' tax bases and unfair tax competition. The Committee in this context endorses the introduction of a CCCTB and is also pleased that the Commission has published a list of non-cooperative tax jurisdictions. The EESC goes even further and proposes that EU rules should include sanctions for companies that continue to run their business through tax havens.

    EESC opinion: Action Plan on Fairer Corporate Taxation
    Slideshow DG TAXUD – A Fair and Efficient Corporate Taxation
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 08/10/2015
    Viide
    ECO/382-EESC-2015-01-01-03720-00-01-ac-tra
    Workers - GR II
    Italy
    Plenary session number
    511
    -

    Following the Baltic, Danube and Adriatic Ionian Regions, the Alpine space was the fourth to adopt its macro-regional strategy on 28 July 2015. The EESC welcomes the EU Strategy for the Alpine Region and sees it as an element of value added for the Alpine area as well as a driver for development that can nurture the competitiveness and cohesion of Europe as a whole.

    EESC opinion: EU Strategy on the Alpine Region
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 17/09/2015
    Viide
    ECO/378-EESC-2015-02060-00-00-ac-tra
    Civil Society Organisations - GR III
    Spain
    Workers - GR II
    Italy
    Plenary session number
    510
    -

    The Economy for the Common Good model proposes the transition towards a "European Ethical Market" which will foster social innovation, boost the employment rate and benefit the environment, for example through using indicators of wellbeing and social development beyond the GDP such as the Common Good Product and the Common Good Balance Sheet. The EESC considers that the Economy for the Common Good model is conceived to be included both in the European and the domestic legal framework and demands from the European Commission, in the framework of the upcoming renewed CSR strategy, to make a qualitative step in order to reward (in terms of public procurement, access to external markets, tax advantages, etc.) those enterprises that can demonstrate higher ethical performance.

    EESC opinion: Economy for the Common Good
    Towards a better measurement of welfare
    Scoping study
    L'économie circulaire
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 17/09/2015
    Viide
    CCMI/134-EESC-2015-01-01
    Employers - GR I
    Netherlands
    Workers - GR II
    Italy

    Studies point to new dynamics in the world economy with substantial consequences for the competitiveness of national economies. The theme of the information report is inspired by a recent study of the Boston Consulting Group. In analysing in-depth the cost-related aspects in manufacturing among a great many countries the study proves that traditional views about the relationship between the developed and underdeveloped/emerging economies is becoming obsolete. In all groupings there are frontrunners and slow developers...

    Shifting Economics in the World, Consequences for EU competitiveness (information report)
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 01/07/2015
    Viide
    ECO/379-EESC-2015-01-01-01333-00-00-ac-tra
    Workers - GR II
    Spain
    Employers - GR I
    Bulgaria
    Plenary session number
    509
    -

    The EESC wants the conditions be created for an efficient, modern financial services sector with appropriate regulations, which grants access to capital providers by companies seeking investment, especially SMEs and high growth companies, and finds it of utmost importance to overcome the current fragmentation of the markets.

    Since a Capital Markets Union (CMU) is to a significant extent a reality for large companies, the EESC stresses the need for measures that will also allow SMEs to benefit from it, for example through accepting simplified standardised criteria for registration on regulated markets, and providing a definition of an emerging growth and high growth company and devoting special attention to the needs of such companies on the capital market.

    EESC opinion: Capital Markets Union
    Building a Capital Markets Union for the EU - Philip Tod, European Commission DG FISMA
    Comments on the European Commission's Green Paper on a Capital Markets Union - U.S. Chamber of Commerce
    Presentation on CMU by DG FISMA - ECO Section meeting 18-06-2015
  • Vastuvõetud arvamused on 27/05/2015
    Viide
    CCMI/129-EESC
    Civil Society Organisations - GR III
    Czech Republic
    Employers - GR I
    Malta

    The Food and drink Industry is the largest manufacturing sector in the EU economy employing directly 4.25 million workers in the EU. It is a non-cyclical and resilient pillar with a strong presence in all member states. It processes 70% of EU agriculture produce and provides safe, quality and nutritious food to the benefit of European consumers, besides being the largest global exporter of food and drink products. The sector generates 7% of EU GDP and should be an important contributor to achieve the EU target set in the 2020 strategy of achieving the necessary expansion of the manufacturing sector that will make it a contributor of 20% of European GDP.

     

    Food and Drinks Sector