Commission roadmap to meet the long-term financing needs of the European economy
28 Mar 2014 04:12 PM
The EC has adopted a package of measures to
stimulate new and different ways of unlocking long-term financing and support
Europe's return to sustainable economic growth. Significant long-term investment will be needed under
the Europe 2020 strategy and the 2030 climate and energy package, in infrastructure, new technologies and innovation,
R&D and human capital. Investment needs for transport, energy and telecom
infrastructure networks of EU importance alone are estimated at
€1 trillion for the period up to 2020 as identified by the Connecting
Europe Facility.
The
economic and financial crisis has affected the ability of the financial sector
to channel funds to the real economy, in particular to long-term investment.
Europe has always relied heavily on banks financing the real economy
(two-thirds of funding comes from banks, compared to one-third in the US). As
banks are deleveraging, there is less funding available to all sectors of the
economy – for example less than one-third of Dutch and Greek SMEs and
only around half of Spanish and Italian SMEs got the full amount of credit they
applied for in 2013.
It
is essential to act to restore the conditions for sustainable growth and
investment and in part that means finding new ways to channel funds to
long-term investment. The Commission's Green Paper consultation on the
long-term financing of the European economy of March 2013 (IP/13/274)
initiated a broad debate and lead to replies from all segments of the economy.
The package of measures adopted includes a communication on the long-term
financing of the economy, a legislative proposal for new rules for occupational
pension funds and a communication on crowdfunding. The communication on
long-term financing builds on the responses to the consultation and on the
debate in international fora such as the G20 and the OECD. It identifies
specific measures which the EU can take to promote long-term
finance.
Internal Market and Services Commissioner Michel Barnier
said: "We have been ambitious in our financial regulatory agenda, with
positive results for financial stability and confidence. As the economic
recovery is picking up, we must be equally ambitious in our support for growth.
Europe has large long-term financing needs to finance sustainable growth
– the type of growth that increases competitiveness and creates jobs in a
smart, sustainable and inclusive way. Our financial system must regain and
increase its ability to finance the real economy. This includes banks as well
as institutional investors such as insurers and pension funds. But we also need
to diversify financing sources in Europe and improve access to finance for
small and medium-sized enterprises that are the backbone of the European
economy. I am confident that the set of measures presented today will
contribute to improving the ability of European capital markets to channel
funds to our long-term needs. "On institutions for occupational retirement
provision, Commissioner Barner added: "All European societies face a
combined challenge of provision for retirement against a background of an
ageing population, and of investing long-term to create growth. Occupational
pension funds are at the junction of those two challenges. They have over
€2.5 trillion of assets under management with a long-term horizon, and 75
million Europeans depend largely on them for their retirement pension.
Today's legislative proposal will improve governance and transparency of
such funds in Europe, improving financial stability as well as promoting
cross-border activity, to further develop occupational pension funds as a key
long-term investors.”
Olli Rehn, Vice-President for Economic and Monetary
Affairs and the Euro, said: "We must make better use of public funds to
maximise the impact of productive investment on growth and job creation. This
means creating synergies and facilitating access to funding for the renewal of
key infrastructure. National and EU budgets, as well as promotional banks and
export credit agencies, all have a role to play. To help SMEs obtain the
resources they need to invest and expand, we must promote high-quality
securitisation to ease their access to capital market
financing."
Vice-President for Industry and Entrepreneurship
Antonio Tajani added: “The ambitious initiatives presented today
will contribute to making the financial system better in channelling resources
towards long-term investments, needed to secure Europe’s position on a
sustainable growth path. The financial crisis has affected the ability of the
financial sector to channel funds to the real economy. SMEs in particular are
key contributors to sustainable growth, however they are still finding it
challenging to obtain financing, particularly in the periphery economies. The
initiatives presented today aim at unlocking additional funding resources to
the real economy and all have a common goal: to promote the single market by
creating the best conditions for growth and competitiveness in
Europe."
Main elements:
The
communication on long-term financing presents a set of specific actions which
the Commission will take to improve long-term financing of the European economy
(MEMO/14/238).
Two of these actions are unveiled:
-
a
proposal to revise the rules for occupational pension funds (revision of Directive 2003/41/EC on the activities and supervision of
institutions for occupational retirement provision - IORP Directive) to support
the further development of an important type of long-term investor in the EU
(MEMO/14/239);
-
a
communication on crowdfunding to offer alternative financing options for SMEs
(MEMO/14/240).
The
actions can be grouped around six main areas:
1.
Mobilising private sources of long term financing: the actions include
finalising the details of the prudential framework for banks and insurance
companies in a way that supports long-term investments in the real economy,
mobilising more personal pension savings and exploring ways to foster more
cross-border flows of savings and the merits of a possible EU savings
account.
In
this context, today’s legislative proposal for new rules on occupational
pension funds (IORP 2) should contribute to more long-term investment. The
proposal has three main objectives:
-
to
ensure that pension scheme members are properly protected against
risks;
-
to
fully reap the benefits of the single market for occupational pensions by
removing obstacles to cross-border provision of services;
-
to
reinforce the capacity of occupational pension funds to invest in financial
assets with a long-term economic profile and thereby support the financing of
growth in the real economy.
2.
Making better use of public funding: fostering the activity of national
promotional banks (financial institutions, created by governments, that provide
financing for the purposes of economic
development) and promoting better cooperation among existing national
export credit schemes (institutions that act as an intermediary between
national governments and exporters to issue export financing). Both of these
play an important role in long-term financing.
3.
Developing European capital markets: facilitating SMEs’ access to capital
markets and to larger investment pools by creating a liquid and transparent
secondary market for corporate bonds, reviving securitisation markets with due
consideration to the risks as well as to the differentiated nature of such
products, and improving the EU environment for covered bonds and private
placement.
4.
Improving SMEs' access to financing: the actions set out in the
communication on long-term financing include improving credit information on
SMEs, reviving the dialogue between banks and SMEs and assessing best practices
on helping SMEs access capital markets. Raising awareness and providing
information on projects are also among the key elements of the actions put
forward in the communication on crowdfunding adopted today, in which the
Commission proposes to:
-
promote industry best practices, raise awareness and
facilitate the development of a quality label
-
closely monitor the development of crowdfunding markets
and national legal frameworks
-
and
regularly assess whether any form of further EU action – including
legislative action – is necessary. The goal is to identify the issues
that may need to be addressed in order to support the growth of
crowdfunding.
5.
Attracting private finance to infrastructure to deliver on Europe 2020:
increasing availability of information on infrastructure investment plans and
improving the credit statistics on infrastructure loans.
6.
Enhancing the wider framework for sustainable finance: improving the corporate
governance regime for long-term financing, for example regarding shareholder
engagement (by revising the Shareholders' Rights Directive – proposal
due to be adopted shortly), employee ownership, corporate governance reporting,
and environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues.
More information
http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/finances/financing-growth/long-t
erm/index_en.htm
http:
//ec.europa.eu/internal_market/pensions/directive/index_en.htm
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