Piețele financiare

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  • Aviz adoptat on 27/10/2020 - Bureau decision date: 28/05/2020
    Referințe
    ECO/521-EESC-2020-02828
    (Romania
    Workers - GR II
    Austria
    Download — Avizul CESE: Euro area economic policy 2020 (additional opinion)
  • Aviz adoptat on 18/09/2020 - Bureau decision date: 20/02/2020
    Referințe
    ECO/510-EESC-2020-2020-00997
    Workers - GR II
    Spain

    The EESC proposes launching a European pact to effectively combat tax fraud, evasion and avoidance and money laundering. The Committee calls on the European Commission to promote a political initiative involving national governments and the other European institutions in achieving this goal, fostering the consensus needed for this and involving civil society. Cooperation between Member States should be the main pillar of the pact. The Committee urges the European institutions and the Member States to provide the financial and human resources required for the effective implementation of existing European legislation and to agree on a commitment to adopt all necessary new legislative and administrative measures to effectively combat tax offences and bad practices, money laundering and the activities of tax havens. This requires permanent evaluation of the outcome of implementing each measure.

    • Slideshow used by DG FISMA at the study group meeting ECO/510 on 8 June 2020
    Download — Avizul CESE: Combat tax fraud, tax avoidance and money laundering
  • Aviz adoptat on 18/09/2020 - Bureau decision date: 21/01/2020
    Referințe
    ECO/506-EESC-2020-00732
    Workers - GR II
    Austria
    (Italy
    Download — Avizul CESE: Economic governance review 2020
  • Aviz adoptat on 15/07/2020 - Bureau decision date: 09/06/2020
    Referințe
    ECO/523-EESC-2020-02886-00-00-AC-TRA

    The EESC strongly supports the Commission's proposal – Next Generation EU – as a specific tool for a quick and effective recovery.

    The EESC takes a very positive view of the Commission's two main decisions:

    1. to introduce an extraordinary financial recovery instrument as part of the multiannual financial framework
    2. to raise common debt, which will be repaid over a long period of time, and prevent the extraordinary financial burden from falling directly on the Member States in the short run.

    The EESC strongly welcomes the fact that the newly proposed instrument should be closely coordinated with the European Semester process, and furthermore welcomes the Commission's proposal to introduce additional genuine own resources based on different taxes (revenues from the EU Emissions Trading System, digital taxation, large companies' revenues).

    Download — Avizul CESE: Recovery plan for Europe and the Multiannual Financial Framework 2021-2027
  • Aviz adoptat on 15/07/2020 - Bureau decision date: 20/02/2020
    Referințe
    ECO/509-EESC-2020-00995-00-00-AC-TRA
    Civil Society Organisations - GR III
    Italy

    While acknowledging the progress made by the Commission in taking account of smaller and less complex banking institutions in its recent regulatory measures, the EESC believes it would be useful to further increase the proportionality of banking rules, without sacrificing the effectiveness of prudential rules.

    The EESC endorses the recent decision to push back the date for implementing the Basel III accord, and feels that when the time comes, the new provision on capital requirements should be transposed in a way that caters properly for the diversity of banking business models in Europe.

    Download — Avizul CESE: Inclusive and sustainable Banking Union
  • Aviz adoptat on 10/06/2020 - Bureau decision date: 30/04/2020
    Referințe
    ECO/518-EESC-2020-02226_00_00_AC_TRA
    Civil Society Organisations - GR III
    Download — Avizul CESE: Covid-19 crisis response - adjustments in banking prudential rules
  • Aviz adoptat on 10/06/2020 - Bureau decision date: 21/01/2020
    Referințe
    ECO/505-EESC-2020-2020-00463-00-00-TRA
    (Spain
    (Czech Republic

    The coronavirus outbreak will have a deep and negative impact on the achievement of the SDGs and the objectives of the European Green Deal. For this reason, the EESC insists on the need to face this urgent threat as soon as possible and focus our recovery efforts without undue delay on the SDGs and the Green Deal. The Sustainable Europe Investment Plan (SEIP) is the first comprehensive policy measure to fulfil very ambitious targets of carbon neutrality until 2050 in line with the EU Green Deal. While saluting the Green Deal's ambitions, the EESC regrets the lack of consistency with the budgetary allocation within the next Multiannual Financial Framework and also expresses its doubts about the effectiveness of climate mainstreaming in all EU programmes and calls on the Member States to involve civil society organisations in pushing for climate-proof EU spending.

    Download — Avizul CESE: European Green Deal Investment Plan
  • Aviz adoptat on 19/02/2020 - Bureau decision date: 29/10/2019
    Referințe
    ECO/503-EESC-2019-04990
    (Czech Republic

    The EESC is concerned to note the euro area's economic downturn and the gradual end to a fall in unemployment, wedded to the persistent higher incidence of risk factors affecting economic performance. It is the European Green Deal that the EESC sees as the backbone of the future EU and euro-area economic configuration – the potential start of a fundamental change and a turning point. If managed successfully, it could move Europe up a gear economically and socially; if not, its failure could fatally jeopardise the integrity of the EU.

    Download — Avizul CESE: Euro area economic policy 2020
  • Aviz adoptat on 30/10/2019 - Bureau decision date: 14/05/2019
    Referințe
    ECO/497-EESC-2019
    (Czech Republic
    Download — Avizul CESE: Euro area economic policy 2019 (additional opinion)
  • Aviz adoptat on 17/07/2019 - Bureau decision date: 24/01/2019
    Referințe
    ECO/492-EESC-2019-01033
    Workers - GR II
    Spain

    The absence of economic and social convergence among Member States and regions is a threat to the political sustainability of the European project and all the benefits it has brought to European citizens. Developing economic and labour market resilience with economic, social, environmental and institutional sustainability should be the principle guiding policies. This will foster upwards convergence and fairness in the transition towards a climate-neutral economy while managing the challenges posed by digitalisation and demographic change.

    • Civil Society Days 2019 - Workshop 6 Economy and democracy labour market resilient and sustainable pathway
    Download — Avizul CESE: Towards a more resilient and sustainable European economy (own initiative opinion)