{"change_dates":[],"dossier":{"amendments":[],"changes":{"2014-11-10T02:11:10":[{"data":[{"body":"EC","commission":[{"DG":[{"title":"Legal Service","url":"http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/legal_service/"}]}],"date":"2005-03-21T00:00:00","docs":[{"celexid":"CELEX:52005DC0098:EN","text":["
PURPOSE: to\n present the European Commission’s report ‘Better lawmaking 2004’.
CONTENT: The\n obligation on the Commission to present an annual report on the application\n of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality to the European Council\n and the European Parliament was enshrined by the Edinburgh European Council in December 1992. Since 1995 this report has also applied\n to measures taken to improve the quality and accessibility of legislation.
This report is the 12th of its kind. It reviews the situation in\n 2004 and covers the following points:
1) Better regulation: Improvement of the regulatory environment is an\n absolute must both with a view to enhancing competitiveness, growth and\n employment and to promoting sustainable development and a better quality of\n life for European citizens. Because of the division of responsibilities\n within the Union, this improvement requires a joint effort on the part of the\n European Parliament, the Council, the Commission and the Member States. There is a need to consolidate the achievements made so far but also to define\n supplementary actions on the basis of the experience gained during the past\n three years. The creation of a new Commission with a new agenda and new\n priorities offers an ideal window of opportunity in this connection. \n Although performances were mixed, all the parties concerned have at any rate\n expressed their growing interest in actions to improve regulatory quality.\n Hence the Commission considers that the rationalisation of structures and\n procedures is an issue which must be addressed as soon as possible.
- Consultation of interested\n parties: In\n 2004, the number of consultations increased significantly. This was achieved\n while complying with most of the minimum standards for consultation\n introduced in 2003. The Commission still needs to make additional efforts on\n feedback to respondents and, to a lesser extent, on transparency. Constant\n vigilance is also needed to engage all parts of society at the consultation\n stage.
- Impact assessment: Assessing the potential impacts\n of often highly complex scenarios across 25 Member States and beyond is\n particularly difficult. 29 Extended Impact Assessments were completed in 2004\n (compared with 21 in 2003). While initial experience shows that the\n methodology used is sound, there needs to be a more systematic application of\n the current methodology across Commission services and greater focus on\n competitiveness issues. Additional resources will also be needed to meet\n growing internal ambitions and external expectations.
- Collection and use of expertise: In 2004, the collection of\n expertise in specific domains has been systematised thanks to the sixth\n Framework Programme for R&D. Work also started to improve transparency on\n expert groups established by the Commission. It will result in the\n publication, early 2005, of a list of these groups and in the launch, later\n that year, of a register providing Parliament and the public with standard\n information on all expert groups.
Updating and\n simplifying the acquis: The\n Commission actively pursued its rolling programme on simplification. The\n Commission is considering reinforcing the mechanisms for identifying\n legislation which is disproportionately burdensome for EU manufacturers in\n relation to the public interests that it aims to safeguard. This exercise\n could lead to the launch of a new phase of the Commission’s simplification\n programme. The reduction of the volume of Community legislation remains a\n relatively weak point (codification and elimination of outdated legislation).
- Choice of instruments:\n The Commission\n has prepared an inventory of the co-regulation mechanisms put in place by the\n Union and the forms of self-regulation with a Community dimension. This\n inventory will be used as a basis for the first report on the possibilities\n of growing use of these regulatory alternatives, which will be presented in\n 2005. Moreover, the Commission continued to argue and act in favour of\n decentralising some highly detailed executive tasks to European regulatory\n agencies. Lastly, progress was made on target-based tripartite contracts and\n agreements between the Community, the States and regional or local\n authorities.
- Monitoring the application of\n Community law: The\n new Member States have been fully integrated into the system for the control\n of the application of Community law (on-line notification of national\n measures transposing directives, etc). A procedure has also been established\n to ensure monitoring and review of the overall impact of enlargement.\n Problems citizens and businesses encounter with the application of Community\n law have been better addressed thanks to measures such as SOLVIT, the\n Internal Market’s problem-solving network. Moreover the Commission has\n prepared the launch in 2005 of a new internet-based tool to facilitate the\n filing of complaints by citizens and businesses concerning non-respect of\n Community law.
2) Actions taken by the\n Member States
The regulatory burden on\n European operators still is mainly due to national legislation. Further\n progress is therefore necessary at Member States level. The Commission calls\n in particular on Member States to consult and to assess impact before\n adopting national legislation transposing EC acts. Lastly, it recommends the\n introduction of comparable, or at least compatible, regulatory quality\n indicators at EU and Member State level in order to monitor progress and facilitate\n the identification of best practices.
3) Application of the principles\n of subsidiarity and proportionality
The Commission took its\n procedural obligations regarding subsidiarity and proportionality very\n seriously. Efforts to consult widely before proposing legislation reached\n record levels. The decrease in the number of regulations and directives\n compared to the number of decisions and recommendations, both in absolute and\n relative terms, indicates how careful the Commission has been to choose the lightest\n instrument. In a number of cases, however, the Commission was criticised for\n not addressing the principles in more precise terms and for the way it\n assessed the burden put on certain stakeholders. In order to better explain\n reasons for concluding that its proposals comply with these principles and to\n facilitate compliance monitoring, the Commission developed and tested a new\n software application for drafting explanatory memoranda. This application\n will ensure that all requested information on the principles is provided in a\n systematic way. It will be used by all services in 2005.
As for burden assessment, the\n Commission wishes to underline that this is a fairly complex matter in a Union so large and so diverse. Providing precise forecasting on each and every possible\n impact is not always possible; when it is feasible, it is often very costly\n and long. Attempting to be exhaustive could result in legislative paralysis\n at the very time the Union is confronted with urgent challenges. The\n Commission therefore thinks that the principle of proportionate analysis\n should continue to prevail.
On the whole, the European Parliament and\n the Council introduced relatively few amendments referring explicitly to\n subsidiarity and proportionality. In most cases, the three institutions\n eventually managed to come to a common interpretation of subsidiarity and\n proportionality. As regards political monitoring of the Union’s legislative\n process, the Committee of the Regions has recognised, in the great majority\n of its opinions, the legitimacy of Union action. As regards ex-post judicial\n review, the subsidiarity principle has been referred to on six occasions by\n the European Court of Justice. No judgment has concluded that the rules of\n the Treaty have been badly applied in this connection.
\nThe Council\n held a policy debate on progress made under the “Better Regulation”\n initiative. In its Conclusion, the Council stressed the importance of an improved\n regulatory framework for growth, jobs and the need to enhance European\n competitiveness by reducing unnecessary burdens on business and citizens. The\n Council also reaffirmed the importance of simplifying the regulatory\n framework in accordance with the principles of subsidiarity and\n proportionality, while respecting the acquis communautaire. Based on\n the Conclusions of previous Council, the present Council, inter alia:
- \n Welcomes the Commission’s Communication\n “Implementing the Community Lisbon Programme: A strategy for the\n simplification of the regulatory environment” and its sectoral approach to\n industrial policy.
- \n Called on the Commission to adopt proposals\n based on the rolling simplification programme and to prioritise the\n simplification of its proposals.
- \n Recognises that in certain cases, and for the\n sake of legal clarity, Regulations may be more appropriate than Directives.\n The choice of legal instruments should continue to be made on a case by cases\n basis, taking full account of the proportionality and subsidiarity\n principles.
- \n Welcomes the Commission’s Communication on an\n EU common methodology for assessing administrative costs imposed by\n legislation.
- \n Welcomes the Commission’s screening\n initiatives and calls on the Commission to continue to monitor pending\n proposals in terms of their impacts with a view to modification, replacement\n or, where appropriate, withdrawal. In addition, the Council takes not of the\n new impact assessment guidelines covering the three pillars of sustainable\n development, strengthened competitiveness dimension and a methodology to\n measure administrative costs. In this context, the Council asks the\n Commission to prepare balanced integrated impact assessments for all major\n legislative proposals and to take full account of the principle of\n subsidiarity. In line with this development the Council has stated its\n intention to carry out impact assessments on substantive Council amendments\n in line with the Inter-institutional Agreement on better law-making.
- \n Reaffirms the importance of transparency in\n policy making and the need for timely stakeholder consultation.
- \n Reaffirms the importance of action by the\n Member States to improve the regulatory framework and takes note of the fact\n that many Member States are continuing with their efforts on better\n regulation as set out in their Lisbon National Reform Programmes.
At the same\n time as announcing these Conclusions, the Council agreed, without discussion,\n on an inter-institutional common approach to impact assessments aimed at\n improving the quality of EU legislation. This approach seeks to assess the\n impact of legislation processed by the European Parliament, the Commission\n and the Council, so that decisions can be made following a careful and\n detailed evaluation of the available evidence. Further, the common approach\n stipulates that the Commission will, as a general rule, carry out impact\n assessments on major items of draft legislation – and notably those included\n in its annual legislative programme. In return, both the Parliament and the\n Council will take account of the impact assessment along with the\n Commission’s initiative, taking them into account when preparing their own\n substantive amendments. Any substantive amendments proposed must map out\n their potential impacts in an integrated and balanced way as well as being\n based on accurate, objective and complete information. Lastly, all three\n institutions will publish their impact assessments on-line and the common\n approach will be reviewed after two years in the light of experience gained.
\nThe committee adopted the own-initiative report drawn up by Bert DOORN (EPP-ED, NL) in response to the Commission's 12th annual report on better lawmaking (2004). Noting that \"the reputation of the European legislature among citizens and businesses of the EU leaves much to be desired\", the report stressed that establishing a transparent, effective and high-quality regulatory environment should be a priority objective of EU policy. Improved legislation would help inter alia to enhance business growth, competitiveness and job creation, thereby contributing to the realisation of the Lisbon strategy.
MEPs wanted to see legislation \"based on principles and focused on quality rather than quantity\". The impact assessment instrument had a major role to play in this process, and needed to be uniformly applied by the Commission. The latter's guidelines published in June 2005 should be implemented in all DGs without delay. The report called for the quality of impact assessments to be submitted to independent scrutiny and said that Parliament would not consider any proposals without their being accompanied by an independently scrutinised and approved impact assessment. The committee also called for the Commission to put into operation as quickly as possible the method it had developed for calculating administrative burdens in quantitative terms as part of the impact assessment.
Noting that much implementing legislation comes into being via the comitology procedure, MEPs said that such legislation must also be subject to an impact assessment. They called for an interinstitutional agreement addressing the different legislative procedures and Parliament's involvement in each of them and, in particular, recognising Parliament as an equal co-legislator in the follow-up to comitology decisions. Parliament should have a call-back right to subject comitology legislation to Parliamentary approval if an impact assessment suggests the need for this. The Council and Commission were urged to enshrine this right before 1 April 2008.
The report added that Parliament and the Council should also make their significant amendments to Commission proposals subject to an impact assessment, using the same methodology as the Commission. As far as monitoring was concerned, MEPs wanted the Commission to report to Parliament within 3 years of the entry into force of new legislation on the latter's impact in practice, focusing particularly on whether the legislation had fulfilled the original purpose and how it was complied with in practice. They also stressed the need for Parliament, in particular the rapporteur responsible, to play a more active role in monitoring the implementation of EU legislation in the Member States and to make use of the network between Parliament and the national and/or regional parliaments.
\nThe European\n Parliament adopted a resolution based on the own-initiative report drafted by\n Bert DOORN (EPP-ED, NL) in response to the Commission's 12th annual\n report on better lawmaking (2004). (Please see the summary dated 21/03/2006.)
\nPURPOSE: to\n present the European Commission’s report ‘Better lawmaking 2004’.
CONTENT: The\n obligation on the Commission to present an annual report on the application\n of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality to the European Council\n and the European Parliament was enshrined by the Edinburgh European Council in December 1992. Since 1995 this report has also applied\n to measures taken to improve the quality and accessibility of legislation.
This report is the 12th of its kind. It reviews the situation in\n 2004 and covers the following points:
1) Better regulation: Improvement of the regulatory environment is an\n absolute must both with a view to enhancing competitiveness, growth and\n employment and to promoting sustainable development and a better quality of\n life for European citizens. Because of the division of responsibilities\n within the Union, this improvement requires a joint effort on the part of the\n European Parliament, the Council, the Commission and the Member States. There is a need to consolidate the achievements made so far but also to define\n supplementary actions on the basis of the experience gained during the past\n three years. The creation of a new Commission with a new agenda and new\n priorities offers an ideal window of opportunity in this connection. \n Although performances were mixed, all the parties concerned have at any rate\n expressed their growing interest in actions to improve regulatory quality.\n Hence the Commission considers that the rationalisation of structures and\n procedures is an issue which must be addressed as soon as possible.
- Consultation of interested\n parties: In\n 2004, the number of consultations increased significantly. This was achieved\n while complying with most of the minimum standards for consultation\n introduced in 2003. The Commission still needs to make additional efforts on\n feedback to respondents and, to a lesser extent, on transparency. Constant\n vigilance is also needed to engage all parts of society at the consultation\n stage.
- Impact assessment: Assessing the potential impacts\n of often highly complex scenarios across 25 Member States and beyond is\n particularly difficult. 29 Extended Impact Assessments were completed in 2004\n (compared with 21 in 2003). While initial experience shows that the\n methodology used is sound, there needs to be a more systematic application of\n the current methodology across Commission services and greater focus on\n competitiveness issues. Additional resources will also be needed to meet\n growing internal ambitions and external expectations.
- Collection and use of expertise: In 2004, the collection of\n expertise in specific domains has been systematised thanks to the sixth\n Framework Programme for R&D. Work also started to improve transparency on\n expert groups established by the Commission. It will result in the\n publication, early 2005, of a list of these groups and in the launch, later\n that year, of a register providing Parliament and the public with standard\n information on all expert groups.
Updating and\n simplifying the acquis: The\n Commission actively pursued its rolling programme on simplification. The\n Commission is considering reinforcing the mechanisms for identifying\n legislation which is disproportionately burdensome for EU manufacturers in\n relation to the public interests that it aims to safeguard. This exercise\n could lead to the launch of a new phase of the Commission’s simplification\n programme. The reduction of the volume of Community legislation remains a\n relatively weak point (codification and elimination of outdated legislation).
- Choice of instruments:\n The Commission\n has prepared an inventory of the co-regulation mechanisms put in place by the\n Union and the forms of self-regulation with a Community dimension. This\n inventory will be used as a basis for the first report on the possibilities\n of growing use of these regulatory alternatives, which will be presented in\n 2005. Moreover, the Commission continued to argue and act in favour of\n decentralising some highly detailed executive tasks to European regulatory\n agencies. Lastly, progress was made on target-based tripartite contracts and\n agreements between the Community, the States and regional or local\n authorities.
- Monitoring the application of\n Community law: The\n new Member States have been fully integrated into the system for the control\n of the application of Community law (on-line notification of national\n measures transposing directives, etc). A procedure has also been established\n to ensure monitoring and review of the overall impact of enlargement.\n Problems citizens and businesses encounter with the application of Community\n law have been better addressed thanks to measures such as SOLVIT, the\n Internal Market’s problem-solving network. Moreover the Commission has\n prepared the launch in 2005 of a new internet-based tool to facilitate the\n filing of complaints by citizens and businesses concerning non-respect of\n Community law.
2) Actions taken by the\n Member States
The regulatory burden on\n European operators still is mainly due to national legislation. Further\n progress is therefore necessary at Member States level. The Commission calls\n in particular on Member States to consult and to assess impact before\n adopting national legislation transposing EC acts. Lastly, it recommends the\n introduction of comparable, or at least compatible, regulatory quality\n indicators at EU and Member State level in order to monitor progress and facilitate\n the identification of best practices.
3) Application of the principles\n of subsidiarity and proportionality
The Commission took its\n procedural obligations regarding subsidiarity and proportionality very\n seriously. Efforts to consult widely before proposing legislation reached\n record levels. The decrease in the number of regulations and directives\n compared to the number of decisions and recommendations, both in absolute and\n relative terms, indicates how careful the Commission has been to choose the lightest\n instrument. In a number of cases, however, the Commission was criticised for\n not addressing the principles in more precise terms and for the way it\n assessed the burden put on certain stakeholders. In order to better explain\n reasons for concluding that its proposals comply with these principles and to\n facilitate compliance monitoring, the Commission developed and tested a new\n software application for drafting explanatory memoranda. This application\n will ensure that all requested information on the principles is provided in a\n systematic way. It will be used by all services in 2005.
As for burden assessment, the\n Commission wishes to underline that this is a fairly complex matter in a Union so large and so diverse. Providing precise forecasting on each and every possible\n impact is not always possible; when it is feasible, it is often very costly\n and long. Attempting to be exhaustive could result in legislative paralysis\n at the very time the Union is confronted with urgent challenges. The\n Commission therefore thinks that the principle of proportionate analysis\n should continue to prevail.
On the whole, the European Parliament and\n the Council introduced relatively few amendments referring explicitly to\n subsidiarity and proportionality. In most cases, the three institutions\n eventually managed to come to a common interpretation of subsidiarity and\n proportionality. As regards political monitoring of the Union’s legislative\n process, the Committee of the Regions has recognised, in the great majority\n of its opinions, the legitimacy of Union action. As regards ex-post judicial\n review, the subsidiarity principle has been referred to on six occasions by\n the European Court of Justice. No judgment has concluded that the rules of\n the Treaty have been badly applied in this connection.
\nThe Council\n held a policy debate on progress made under the “Better Regulation”\n initiative. In its Conclusion, the Council stressed the importance of an improved\n regulatory framework for growth, jobs and the need to enhance European\n competitiveness by reducing unnecessary burdens on business and citizens. The\n Council also reaffirmed the importance of simplifying the regulatory\n framework in accordance with the principles of subsidiarity and\n proportionality, while respecting the acquis communautaire. Based on\n the Conclusions of previous Council, the present Council, inter alia:
- \n Welcomes the Commission’s Communication\n “Implementing the Community Lisbon Programme: A strategy for the\n simplification of the regulatory environment” and its sectoral approach to\n industrial policy.
- \n Called on the Commission to adopt proposals\n based on the rolling simplification programme and to prioritise the\n simplification of its proposals.
- \n Recognises that in certain cases, and for the\n sake of legal clarity, Regulations may be more appropriate than Directives.\n The choice of legal instruments should continue to be made on a case by cases\n basis, taking full account of the proportionality and subsidiarity\n principles.
- \n Welcomes the Commission’s Communication on an\n EU common methodology for assessing administrative costs imposed by\n legislation.
- \n Welcomes the Commission’s screening\n initiatives and calls on the Commission to continue to monitor pending\n proposals in terms of their impacts with a view to modification, replacement\n or, where appropriate, withdrawal. In addition, the Council takes not of the\n new impact assessment guidelines covering the three pillars of sustainable\n development, strengthened competitiveness dimension and a methodology to\n measure administrative costs. In this context, the Council asks the\n Commission to prepare balanced integrated impact assessments for all major\n legislative proposals and to take full account of the principle of\n subsidiarity. In line with this development the Council has stated its\n intention to carry out impact assessments on substantive Council amendments\n in line with the Inter-institutional Agreement on better law-making.
- \n Reaffirms the importance of transparency in\n policy making and the need for timely stakeholder consultation.
- \n Reaffirms the importance of action by the\n Member States to improve the regulatory framework and takes note of the fact\n that many Member States are continuing with their efforts on better\n regulation as set out in their Lisbon National Reform Programmes.
At the same\n time as announcing these Conclusions, the Council agreed, without discussion,\n on an inter-institutional common approach to impact assessments aimed at\n improving the quality of EU legislation. This approach seeks to assess the\n impact of legislation processed by the European Parliament, the Commission\n and the Council, so that decisions can be made following a careful and\n detailed evaluation of the available evidence. Further, the common approach\n stipulates that the Commission will, as a general rule, carry out impact\n assessments on major items of draft legislation – and notably those included\n in its annual legislative programme. In return, both the Parliament and the\n Council will take account of the impact assessment along with the\n Commission’s initiative, taking them into account when preparing their own\n substantive amendments. Any substantive amendments proposed must map out\n their potential impacts in an integrated and balanced way as well as being\n based on accurate, objective and complete information. Lastly, all three\n institutions will publish their impact assessments on-line and the common\n approach will be reviewed after two years in the light of experience gained.
\nThe committee adopted the own-initiative report drawn up by Bert DOORN (EPP-ED, NL) in response to the Commission's 12th annual report on better lawmaking (2004). Noting that \"the reputation of the European legislature among citizens and businesses of the EU leaves much to be desired\", the report stressed that establishing a transparent, effective and high-quality regulatory environment should be a priority objective of EU policy. Improved legislation would help inter alia to enhance business growth, competitiveness and job creation, thereby contributing to the realisation of the Lisbon strategy.
MEPs wanted to see legislation \"based on principles and focused on quality rather than quantity\". The impact assessment instrument had a major role to play in this process, and needed to be uniformly applied by the Commission. The latter's guidelines published in June 2005 should be implemented in all DGs without delay. The report called for the quality of impact assessments to be submitted to independent scrutiny and said that Parliament would not consider any proposals without their being accompanied by an independently scrutinised and approved impact assessment. The committee also called for the Commission to put into operation as quickly as possible the method it had developed for calculating administrative burdens in quantitative terms as part of the impact assessment.
Noting that much implementing legislation comes into being via the comitology procedure, MEPs said that such legislation must also be subject to an impact assessment. They called for an interinstitutional agreement addressing the different legislative procedures and Parliament's involvement in each of them and, in particular, recognising Parliament as an equal co-legislator in the follow-up to comitology decisions. Parliament should have a call-back right to subject comitology legislation to Parliamentary approval if an impact assessment suggests the need for this. The Council and Commission were urged to enshrine this right before 1 April 2008.
The report added that Parliament and the Council should also make their significant amendments to Commission proposals subject to an impact assessment, using the same methodology as the Commission. As far as monitoring was concerned, MEPs wanted the Commission to report to Parliament within 3 years of the entry into force of new legislation on the latter's impact in practice, focusing particularly on whether the legislation had fulfilled the original purpose and how it was complied with in practice. They also stressed the need for Parliament, in particular the rapporteur responsible, to play a more active role in monitoring the implementation of EU legislation in the Member States and to make use of the network between Parliament and the national and/or regional parliaments.
\nThe European\n Parliament adopted a resolution based on the own-initiative report drafted by\n Bert DOORN (EPP-ED, NL) in response to the Commission's 12th annual\n report on better lawmaking (2004). (Please see the summary dated 21/03/2006.)
\n