Economic and European policy issues
Analyses and commentaries on economic and fiscal policy, and on the development of the EU and its policy areas (including EMU). Particular attention is devoted to the enlargement of the EU by Central and Eastern European countries.
Talking Point
FATCA paving the way - Exchange of tax information continues to make international headway
Seldom has there been such feverish activity: both the speed and the number of international initiatives to improve the taxation of cross-border investment income as well as the broad media interest in the topic have swelled to dimensions rarely seen before. There are a variety of reasons for this. One important reason is the continuing crisis in Europe – countries are in urgent need of tax revenues. The US, however, has also acted as a catalyst for international negotiations by passing the FATCA legislation. [more]
Chart in focus
Research Briefing
Not quite fit for purpose: Conditionality under the EU’s financial framework for 2014 to 2020
The next multiannual financial framework of the European Union (2014-2020) allows disbursements to be partially linked to economic conditions in order to enhance the effect of these funds by preparing the right economic framework. However, time inconsistencies and a low probability of sanctions make these instruments less effective. These first approaches to conditionality under the MFF should be further developed and extended to other instruments of the Union such as the ESM, the fiscal compact and other mechanisms of economic policy coordination. [more]
Current Issue
Do all roads lead to fiscal union? Options for deeper fiscal integration in the eurozone
The current crisis has demonstrated that the eurozone is still a very heterogeneous economic area. As the common monetary policy cannot stabilise a country which experiences an asymmetric shock, there is a growing debate about whether the architecture of the eurozone needs to be complemented by fiscal stabilisation instruments. While the synchronisation of business cycles and an effective absorption of regional shocks would be in the interest of all the euro countries, the main question is how this could be put into practice without creating undesirable incentives. After all, a deeper fiscal integration would hardly be manageable without redistribution components. [more]
In focus
Major family businesses in Germany
Within the framework of “The major family businesses in Germany” study series, 405 of the 4,400 major family businesses in Germany with an annual turnover of more than 50 million euros provided representative information on their current and future economic situation, the euro crisis, Germany as a place for doing business and the impact of the energy policy as well as how to deal with the shortage of labour. [more]
EU Monitor
The impact of tax systems on economic growth in Europe: An overview
Since the financial crisis, the countries of Europe have been faced with the difficult challenge of consolidating their budgets while at the same time promoting economic growth. One approach is a growth-conducive tax system, which keeps distorting effects of taxation on the growth factors – labour, capital and technological progress – as small as possible. Tax reforms carried out in the EU to date are steps in the right direction. Increasing economic policy coordination in Europe offers the chance to implement further structural reforms. [more]
 
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