A services economy that works for Europeans

11 Jan 2017 12:00 PM

Yesterday the Commission presented an ambitious and balanced package of measures that will make it easier for companies and professionals to provide services to a potential customer base of 500 million people in the EU.

A fresh boost to the services sector will benefit consumers, jobseekers and businesses, and will generate economic growth across Europe.

As part of the roadmap laid out in the Single Market Strategy, yesterday's proposals delivered on President Juncker's political commitment to unleash the full potential of the Single Market and make it the launchpad for European companies to thrive in the global economy. This goal was confirmed by the European Council in its December 2015, June 2016 and December 2016 conclusions. The proposed measures aim to make it easier for services providers to navigate administrative formalities, and to help Member States identify overly burdensome or outdated requirements on professionals operating domestically or across borders. Rather than amending existing EU rules in the area of services, the Commission focuses on ensuring they are applied better, as evidence shows that implementing them to their full potential would provide a significant boost to the EU economy.

Vice-President Jyrki Katainen, responsible for Jobs, Growth Investment and Competitiveness, yesterday said: "Barriers to trade in services are also barriers to competitiveness. Making better use of the Single Market for Services will help European businesses create jobs and grow across borders, offering a wider choice of services at better prices, while maintaining high standards for consumers and workers. Today we are proposing to simplify procedures for cross-border service providers as well as a new and more modern way for Member States to work together to regulate their services sectors."

Commissioner Elżbieta BieÅ„kowska, responsible for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs yesterday said: "Services represent two thirds of the EU economy and generate 90% of new jobs. But the Single Market – this jewel that is all too often taken for granted – does not function properly for services. As a result, we miss out on important potential for jobs and growth. Today we are giving a fresh boost to the services sector to make Europe a global hub for providing, buying and developing new services."

The four concrete initiatives adopted by the Commission yesterday were:

Background information

While services represent two thirds of the EU economy and account for some 90% of job creation, the services sector is underperforming. Productivity growth in the sector is low and the rest of the world is catching up. Barriers stop firms from being set up and expanding, and lead to higher prices for consumers and less choice. Moreover, the performance of manufacturing is increasingly linked to the competitiveness of services. Barriers to trade in services in the Single Market are therefore barriers to the competitiveness of EU manufacturing. To reverse this trend and create additional jobs and growth, Member States need to stimulate the development of the services economy and make better use of the potential of the Single Market for Services.

Documents

Services Card_factsheet.pdf 

For more information

Frequently Asked Questions – MEMO/17/11

Proposal for a Services e-card

Proposal for a Services Notification Procedure

Proposal for a Proportionality Test

Guidance on reform recommendations for regulation in professional services

Factsheet

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