Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
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Lead | IMCO | THUN UND HOHENSTEIN Róża Gräfin von (PPE) | HOANG NGOC Liem (S&D), LØKKEGAARD Morten (ALDE), RÜHLE Heide (Verts/ALE), BIELAN Adam (ECR), DE JONG Dennis (GUE/NGL), SALVINI Matteo (EFD) |
Legal Basis RoP 132-p2
Activites
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2010/03/09
Results of vote in Parliament
- Results of vote in Parliament
- Debate in Parliament
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T7-0051/2010
summary
The European Parliament adopted by 530 votes to 85, with 3 abstentions, a legislative resolution on the Internal Market Scoreboard.Members welcome the Commission Recommendation of 29 June 2009 on measures to improve the functioning of the single market on measures to improve the functioning of the single market. They stress that Member States should not cherry-pick the measures that suit them best but undertake to implement them all.Member States are urged to work closely with the Commission and with each other, and to assume their share of responsibility and ownership to exploit the potential of the internal market fully. The Commission is called upon to use all its powers in ensuring effective application of internal market rules including effective market monitoring, harmonisation, further simplification of legislation and other tools to reduce the administrative burden on citizens and businesses.Take action at an earlier stage:Parliament takes the view that it is important to act at an earlier stage in order to limit the risk of a transposition deficit and that the Commission should do more to support the Member States throughout the transposition period. It also takes the view that this should involve, in particular, dialogue and a greater exchange of information aimed at anticipating possible problems and seeking to resolve them before the end of the deadline for transposition.In this context, the resolution gives strong support to the idea of close involvement of national parliaments and enhanced cooperation with other stakeholders, such as the social partners, during negotiations and the transposition process. Members stress the importance of open dialogue and closer cooperation between national parliaments and the European Parliament with a view to further discussion and detailed consideration of the problems encountered by Member States during the transposition process.The Commission is invited to:look into new ways to eliminate remaining barriers to completing the internal market, including the creation of a "internal-market test" for all proposed new EU legislation, to ensure that proposed new measures do not undermine the internal market;organise an annual Internal Market Forum bringing together representatives of EU institutions and Member States and other stakeholders in order to establish a clearer commitment to transposition, application and enforcement of internal market legislation;regularly include in its Internal Market Scoreboard more detailed information on the application and enforcement of internal market legislation, including objective indicators as to the functioning of the internal market;present a more reader-friendly press release together with the Internal Market Scoreboard in order to raise awareness of its results and to increase pressure on the Member States to ensure the correct and timely transposition of directives.Transposition: Members welcome the fact that the transposition deficit of 1% has been met for the third consecutive time. They urge the nine Member States which failed to reach this objective to take action to improve their record.The resolution recalls that the number of directives that have not been transposed by one or more Member States remains too high and calls on the Commission and the Member States to work together to bring this number down as a matter of urgency, starting with those directives whose transposition has been overdue for two years or more. Member States are urged to provide the Commission with correlation tables containing detailed information on the national measures taken to transpose directives in order for it to be able to provide more detailed information on the quality of transposition.Application: Parliament considers that Member States should enhance the efficient cooperation among national, regional and local authorities involved in applying internal market rules by ensuring and strengthening an internal market coordination function within their national administrations. It invites:Member States to provide national and local civil servants and judicial authorities with regular training on internal market rules in the framework of existing Community programmes and networks;the Commission to view internal market legislation as a circular process in which ex-post evaluations should play an important part and should be used to establish whether the legislation meets or surpasses the original impact assessment.Enforcement: Members hold the view that Member States should step up their efforts in providing information to citizens and businesses about their rights in the internal market, enabling them to exercise those rights in practice. They consider that the information on the internal market made available to them on the internet by the Commission, while considerable, are fragmented. They call on the Commission to: finalise, as a matter of priority, the Single Market Assistance Services project for streamlining information, advice and problem-solving assistance services and making them more accessible;establish and strengthen the 'Your Europe - Business' portal as an electronic one-stop-shop for business information relating to the internal market;make greater use of the Enterprise Europe Network for the targeted distribution of information and to reduce bureaucracy for the Network's partners;take, with the Member States, the necessary measures in order to make the SOLVIT centres and their free-of-charge problem-solving services more visible to European businesses and citizens.
- #2999
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2010/03/01
Council Meeting
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2999
summary
The Council took note of the following three reports:the Internal Market Scoreboard No 20: state of play of implementation by Member States of internal market directives into national law;report on the SOLVIT system (an online internal market problem-solving network);report on the “Citizens Sign Post Service”, a service that provides personalised advice to individual citizens in relation to the rights they enjoy under single market rules.
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2999
summary
- 2010/01/15 Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
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2009/12/02
Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
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2009/10/19
Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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2009/07/17
Non-legislative basic document published
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SEC(2009)1007
summary
PURPOSE: to present a Commission staff working document on the Internal Market Scoreboard n°19.BACKGROUND: an effectively working internal market is essential for the creation of a stable and innovative economic environment. Although the internal market has come a long way, there is still a lot of work to be done in order to make sure the internal market reaches its full potential. The internal market cannot work properly without correctly transposed, applied and enforced Community rules affecting the functioning of the internal market.Published biannually since 1997, the Internal Market Scoreboard examines how quickly and how well each of the Member States transposes Single Market directives into national legislation. It also highlights the number of ongoing infringement proceedings against Member States. Recently there has been some significant improvement on this level.CONTENT: the main findings of this report are as follows:Transposition: it is imperative that Member States transpose internal market legislation into national law on time. The Internal Market Scoreboard of July 2009 reveals that for the third consecutive time the EU average transposition deficit was 1%, in line with the target set by the European Council. The consistent good result suggests that Member States have put in place structural improvements to ensure timely transposition.In total, 18 out of 27 Member States are in line with the 1% target. Once again, Denmark and Malta are the overall best performers both with only 3 directives away from a perfect score. A further 2 Member States (United Kingdom and Belgium) are close to reaching the 1% target. At the other end of the spectrum, Greece, Poland, Portugal, the Czech Republic, Italy, Luxembourg and Estonia are far off the target. The transposition deficit in 6 out of these 9 Member States has increased even further compared to half a year ago which is a serious source of concern. In addition, the number of long overdue directives remains stubbornly high. In 22% of directives not transposed the transposition deadline expired already more than 2 years ago. Furthermore 6% of directives have not been transposed in all Member States, which translates into 100 Internal Market directives not producing their full effect in the whole EU.Infringements: once transposed, it appears that Member States pay less attention to applying directives correctly. Even where Member States have managed to reduce the number of infringement procedures, those efforts are marginal and the Member States in question continue to have a significant number of infringement proceedings. Italy accounts for more than double the average amount of infringement proceedings for incorrect transposition or incorrect application of Internal Market legislation. Public procurement supplement: EC procurement legislation seeks to prevent favouritism or inertia from leading to procurement markets that are closed to competitive suppliers, including those from other Member States. A recent Eurobarometer survey reveals that a large majority of citizens in almost all EU Member States understand that EU procurement rules are designed to curb favouritism and corruption.There are widespread differences in the use of particular procurement procedures across Member States. The Commission will continue to analyse the factors that may explain these differences. The Commission has recognised that the years 2009 and 2010 constitute a period of urgency justifying the more extensive use of accelerated procurement procedures. In the first 5 months of this year, the number of accelerated restricted procedures has almost doubled compared to the same period in 2008.
- DG {'url': 'http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/internal_market/', 'title': 'Internal Market and Services'}, BARNIER Michel
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SEC(2009)1007
summary
Documents
- Non-legislative basic document published: SEC(2009)1007
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A7-0084/2009
- Debate in Council: 2999
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T7-0051/2010
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