Staffing the EU Institutions

Similar documents
Simplify the management and administrative processes of the programme; Mainstream / simplify the structure of the programme.

GLOBAL ENTERPRISE SURVEY REPORT 2009 PROVIDING A UNIQUE PICTURE OF THE OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FACING BUSINESSES ACROSS THE GLOBE

14587/17 ADD 4 LJP/kg 1 DG G 2A

Plate forme européenne de la société civile pour l éducation tout au long de la vie European Civil Society Platform on Lifelong Learning

Professional Oversight Board

Council of the European Union Brussels, 11 January 2016 (OR. en) Mr Alain LE ROY, Secretary-General of the European External Action Service

NOTE Delegations Contributions concerning the content of upcoming Staff Regulations Review

Civil Service Statistics 2009: A focus on gross annual earnings

Financial Capability. For Europe s Youth And Pre-retirees: Financial Capability. For Europe s Youth And Pre-retirees:

We ll help you decide. Investing your ITV pension savings

MONITORING POVERTY AND SOCIAL EXCLUSION IN SCOTLAND 2015

Lars Nyberg: Developments in the property market

TRANSACTIONS OF SOCIETY OF ACTUARIES 1986 VOL. 38 TRANSACTIONS ADDRESS OF THE PRESIDENT, RICHARD S. ROBERTSON

The Policy Support Instrument: A Key Component of the Recent IMF Reform Movement

Guidelines. Actuarial Work for Social Security

IMPLEMENTATION GUIDE: SCHOOL SITE ACQUISITION CHARGE

ANNEX 15 of the Commission Implementing Decision on the 2015 Annual Action programme for the Partnership Instrument

THE ADOPTION OF ACCRUAL ACCOUNTING AND BUDGETING BY GOVERNMENTS (CENTRAL, FEDERAL, REGIONAL AND LOCAL)

Article 1 Scope of application

Investment assets totalled EUR billion at the end of 2016 return for the past 20 years 4.3 per cent in real terms

Official Journal of the European Union L 256/63. (Acts adopted under Title VI of the Treaty on European Union)

Adding a bit extra. Your guide to investing your additional contributions

Fifth REWIEW MEETING Convention on Nuclear Safety

The Truth About Participating Whole Life

COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL

Andrey Kondakov, new President of the Black Sea Trade and Development Bank (BSTDB) on diplomacy, crisis and new projects

The IMF s organizational structure is set out in its

Daniel Capocci Director Consulting Deloitte

Draft TREATY ON THE DEMOCRATIZATION OF THE GOVERNANCE OF THE EURO AREA («T-DEM»)

(Acts whose publication is obligatory) REGULATION (EC) No 1927/2006 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL. of 20 December 2006

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT. Accompanying the

Civil Service Statistics 2008: a focus on gross annual earnings

Challenges on Dutch and Finnish roads towards extending citizens working life: The current debates.

The End of Switzerland s Cantonal Tax Regimes Is Near: What s Next?

Venture capital trusts. An Octopus guide

Summary. Introduction

The Financial Engines National 401(k) Evaluation. Who benefits from today s 401(k)?

Civil Service Pension Schemes

Malcolm Edey: Competition in the deposit market

Bilateral Guideline. EEA and Norwegian Financial Mechanisms

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION IKV BRIEF 2010 THE DEBT CRISIS IN GREECE AND THE EURO ZONE

Having regard to European Commission decision No C(2008)6866/3,

COMMISSION DELEGATED REGULATION (EU) /... of

Monitoring poverty and social exclusion

COUNCIL DECISION 2011/411/CFSP

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL. on the application of Annex XII to the Staff Regulations

AFG CONTRIBUTION TO THE WORK OF THE HIGH LEVEL EXPERT GROUP ON EU FINANCIAL SUPERVISION

Work and Pensions Select Committee Inquiry into governance and best practice in workplace pension provision

HUMAN RESOURCES INSTITUTE OF ALBERTA

Beyond the Dollar Peter B. Kenen Princeton University*

L 347/174 Official Journal of the European Union

BIGGEST RELOCATION CHALLENGES DOMESTIC U.S. RELOCATION

MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTABILITY AND RISK MANAGEMENT

Decision on Secondment of National Experts

Economic standard of living

17 FAQs regarding Cyprus' bail-out/bail-in

COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL, THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK

European Employment Policy Observatory. EEPO Review. Stimulating Job Demand: The Design of Effective Hiring Subsidies in Europe TURKEY.

EUROBAROMETER 71 PUBLIC OPINION IN THE EUROPEAN UNION SPRING This survey was requested and coordinated by Directorate-General for Communication.

Pay in the public services how workers continue to pay for the crisis

WorkSafe New Zealand. Annual Review briefing to the Transport & Industrial Relations Committee. 2015/16 Financial Year.

Contract notice in 2014/S of 31/10/2014

The Future of Public Sector Pension Schemes

Closing the Gap Between Belief and Behavior

Marriage and Money. January 2018

Proposal for a COUNCIL REGULATION

Seizing the opportunity for effective legal reform in Albania

CASUALTY ACTUARIAL SOCIETY STRATEGIC PLAN

Irma Rosenberg: Assessment of monetary policy

GOOD PRACTICES FOR GOVERNANCE OF PENSION SUPERVISORY AUTHORITIES

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES

Department of Social Protection. An Roinn Coimirce Sóisialaí. Social Policy Developments in the EU

WOMEN'S CURRENT PENSION ARRANGEMENTS: INFORMATION FROM THE GENERAL HOUSEHOLD SURVEY. Sandra Hutton Julie Williams Steven Kennedy

Understanding investments. A quick and simple guide to investing.

The cost of public sector pensions in Scotland

Welcome to Boyden s annual review of the Interim Management market in the UK

Regional Policy in the Czech Republic in the Period Around Its Accession to the European Union

IOPS Technical Committee DRAFT GOOD PRACTICES FOR GOVERNANCE OF PENSION SUPERVISORY AUTHORITIES. Version for public consultation

European Union Pension Directive

The Middle East and the New Global Economy: The Drive for Competitiveness, Skills and Innovation

The Finance Ministry at the European Union in Brussels

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION. State Aid Scoreboard. Report on state aid granted by the EU Member States. - Autumn 2012 Update. {SEC(2012) 443 final}

STATUTE OF THE EDUCATION REFORM INITIATIVE OF SOUTH EASTERN EUROPE (ERI SEE) Article 1

Public Service Electric and Gas and Public Service Enterprise Group

Annex B: Payment and Expenses for Governors

adopting the Sth Framework Programme of the European Community for research, technological development and demonstration activities ( )

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT. The European Schools' system in 2009

JAES Action Plan : Cross-cutting issues

2011 ODA in $ at 2010 prices and rates ODA US$ million (current) %Change 2011/2010 at 2010 prices and exchange

Great Depression Economic history Timing and severity

Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community, and in particular Articles 31 and 32 thereof,

Private Client. A Guide to Occupational and Personal Pensions

DECISION 05/2007/GB OF THE GOVERNING BOARD OF THE EUROPEAN POLICE COLLEGE ADOPTING THE MULTI ANNUAL STAFF POLICY PLAN

HOW TO SET UP A BUSINESS IN LUXEMBOURG

COMMENTS ON SESSION 1 AUTOMATIC STABILISERS AND DISCRETIONARY FISCAL POLICY. Adi Brender *

Volume Eleven, Issue Five May 2008

Proposal for a COUNCIL DECISION

EN Official Journal of the European Union L 77/77

Long-term PSEO Expenditure

IFRS 9 Implementation

Transcription:

Staffing the EU Institutions Page 1

Staffing the EU Institutions Introduction This paper looks at the nature and structure of the staffing of EU institutions. This is a topical subject, as debates are to take place in 2012 between the Council of Ministers and the European Parliament about a further reform package of measures. The underlying issue is that of maintaining a high quality independent European public service. There is a specific UK dimension: the low and falling share of UK staff in the European institutions, and especially the Commission. Background The European Coal and Steel Community (1951) drew its staff from both public and private sectors of its Member States. As the later Communities were all merged (in 1967) general Staff Regulations were drawn up based which were intended to provide careers, pay and conditions that reflected the best of the French and German systems, in order to attract good quality staff from all the Member States. They should bring knowledge of the countries from which they came but be independent of them, so providing the possibility of long-term careers. They needed to be able to be mobile, and to work across the Member States and beyond. Recruitment methods followed those of the original Member States: for the higher grades, both academic qualifications and some post-graduate experience was needed. Success in a recruitment competition didn t result in an immediate job offer, however; it meant a place on a reserve list of suitable candidates, from which staff from as many different countries as possible might be offered a job. The need to draw staff from all Member States, particularly at the higher levels, meant that some flexibility was allowed to these exacting procedures by easier provisions for recruiting temporary staff. Pay and related issues (including pensions) followed the same principles. Staff were recruited on the basis of a single salary system irrespective of the geographical origin of the staff member. Pay scales were based on an average of what was paid to Member States civil servants, and comparable tax was paid, though into the budget of the European Community, to which the official was expected to be loyal. (From the outset this was a very simple tax system with none of the allowances and exemptions familiar in national tax systems; to the limited extent that special circumstances were taken into account this was done by allowances added to the basic salary). Mechanisms were established to: ensure equality of pay for all staff of the same grade; guarantee equivalence of purchasing power no matter where the official was serving; take account of the costs of living abroad, and of bringing their family with them. Page 1 Copyright 2012 Senior European Experts Group All rights reserved

A medical insurance scheme copying those in the original Member States was also put in place to work with the health structures of these countries. In the early days, the details of every aspect of careers, working conditions and pay were discussed by ministers there are even stories of the Council of Ministers discussing the price of a dish of grated carrot in the staff canteen. But taking all decisions at political level didn t make sense. The Staff Regulations was one response. So too after salaries fell relative to the member states by some 35 per cent over the 1960s, and some staff unrest was the adoption in 1972 of a Method for determining salaries without the need for individual political decision. This was based on the principle that pay of European Community staff tracked that of the public services in the Member States, going up or down according to an average weighted by size. A European public service suited to its task The EU in 2012, with 27 Member States with a much wider range of social and economic circumstances as well as traditions in the public sector, is now very different from the European Community of six in the 1960s. There have also been major changes in the private sector. It is remarkable that the systems designed some five decades ago continue to provide a high quality independent staff. Several reasons contribute to this. The total staff of the European Union remains small in relation to its role. Although there are now nearly five times the number of Member States as there were when the community was created, seven institutions, many agencies spread across the Union, and a worldwide system of representation, the total staff of the Union is still only some 56,000. This can be compared admittedly very superficially, but to give scale with the staff of one major city in one of our Member States (Birmingham, some 35,000), or with one ministry (the UK Department of Work & Pensions employs 100,000). Of the total of EU staff, some 10 per cent is needed for interpretation or translation. Interpretation and translation for most or all languages are available only at the highest political level. Below this, translation and interpretation are limited according to need and essentially only to meetings involving those outside the institutions. Within the institutions staff are expected to manage without linguistic support. One reason why the EU institutions have remained small has been close working relationship with national civil services and other experts. Some tasks are delegated to national administrations (the bulk of the Common Agricultural Policy is administered in this way). Also, in many areas of policy the Commission does not have enough staff to have detailed knowledge of the policy areas it has to work in. Its departments therefore often draw on the expertise of experts drawn from the Member States, not necessarily from the public sector. This closeness to the Member States has been added to by a policy of employing national officials within the institutions for short periods as detached national experts (i.e. seconded). There have been a steady stream of changes and reforms, which have kept the Union administrations and notably the Commission, the largest concentrated in size, and contained by cost. The largest reform was in 2004 and achieved significant and extensive changes, including increased pension contributions, longer service before pension and limitations on early retirement, as well as major changes in career structures. The reforms Page 2

then made still go far beyond what has happened in the national civil services of most of the Member States. They are estimated to deliver savings totalling 8 billion. Can such a European public service survive? Because national administrations implement EU regulations, the European public service has remained a small body working very closely with national administrations and experts. In this context, its independence is crucial; if the Member States were to feel that it was putting national interests first, the system would no longer work. That is why the ability of the EU public service to attract high quality staff for long-term careers matters as well as to discern and defend EU interests in situations frequently involving top staff not only administrations of non-member countries but also of big corporations. Career structures There has been a shift to contractual staff for more junior functions, with more limited career prospects. For middle and senior staff, the major change has been the great increase in the number of temporary staff and detached national officials. While this offers a partial route to bring in nationalities that are under-represented, those who come to work in the institutions but expect to return to their national public service after a short time will have less independence from it than those who expect to work there for a much longer career. They have less time to develop the contribution they make, particularly because of the need to adjust to the working environment of different languages. Even more important, to build up a network of relationships in an administrative structure that brings together different cultures, and which relies on a wide range of contacts across the Member States, inevitably takes time, and will only produce its full value after a number of years. Recruitment and geographical balance Successive enlargements have increased the number of nationalities in the European institutions. The institutions have always rejected the idea of a formal geographic quota, even if the need for a fairly strict balance has been informally accepted for the most senior positions. Recruitment is open to all qualified candidates. From a UK perspective, there are three difficulties: The professional experience required at graduate level doesn t match that needed for the UK public service. On the continent, the tradition is to recruit to public service people who probably have a fairly specialised first degree, and who have already gained some professional experience. In the UK, the tradition was different (though it has now evolved), of selecting future senior staff without much regard to areas of study, and before professional experience had intervened, with training on the job; The language requirements: to reduce the need for language services within the institutions, the language requirements on recruitment have increased. This puts many UK candidates at a major disadvantage because of the small place given to language teaching in UK schools; The negative political atmosphere in the UK towards the EU. The result is that there is now a serious shortfall in the number of UK staff working in the institutions. This will not be easy to correct, all the more so as pay and career structures are no Page 3

longer especially attractive compared to UK public service employment. The UK government (with others) also tries to reduce salaries and career prospects, which makes recruitment harder. Pay levels and pay calculation Pay levels may remain competitive for junior staff, especially from the newer member states. Though comparisons are difficult and contested, at more senior levels pay levels are much less clearly attractive, and possibly now less than in the more prosperous Member States. At the recruitment grades for graduate staff, anecdotally it seems that candidates feel that starting pay is not enough to justify bringing a family to Brussels or Luxembourg, where the cost of housing is considerable. This now calls in question the ability of the institutions to recruit the best staff. This evolution has been the result of constant efforts by certain Member States to reject or diminish the importance of the Method. This has been misunderstood as an indexation which can only produce increases, whereas it is instead a linkage which can (and has) also produced decreases by bringing together real changes in salaries in the member states public services and the cost of living in the different countries where EU staff are employed (this latter is often negative in times of economic difficulty). While by its nature, an average always produces a result that is better than that which applies in one or more Member States and worse than in others, most Member State representatives in the Council of Ministers have looked only at the comparison with their own country. As a result, over the years the principle of parallel development has been compromised by overall cuts in take home pay, presented as special crisis levies which have not been removed or reduced, but rather increased. This has the effect of making EU staff bear twice the effect of an economic downturn once through its impact on Member States' public sector pay, once through the crisis levy. Pensions Pensions are a general issue, as everywhere lives lengthen and medical costs increase. There is no reason for EU staff to be exempt from the movement towards affordable systems that balance better the costs for the younger and the benefits of the older. Pensions are also a big part of a salary scheme that needs to remain attractive. The EU has already increased pensionable ages, and taken other comparable measures which will stabilise the future cost of pensions (on a static staff hypothesis). However, unlike many other pension schemes, the EU final salary pension scheme is fully funded, thanks to the care with which structures were put in place at the outset, with regular actuarial reviews and adjustments of contributions by staff and employer. There is a pension fund to which both staff and employer contribute. Since at the outset, when retirements were few, this would have produced much more income than was needed, the Member States decided that, rather than pay their contributions into a real fund they would keep the funds but record their value in a notional interest-bearing fund in the EU accounts, with the guarantee that this would be drawn down as and when the funds were actually needed. The EU accounts show this notional fund, and therefore the money saved up by the Member States, at 37 billion, which is more than enough to fund all present liabilities. Page 4

Current issues The Parliament and Council have to decide the future system of calculating salaries and pensions (the present system of parallelism the method expires at the end of 2012). The Commission has also chosen to seek further administrative economies. It has therefore proposed: a reduction of staff of five per cent by all institutions over the next 5 years; the renewal of the method of parallel development (though with changes that may produce future problems); further changes to careers; increases in pensionable age and further limits on early retirement. At the moment, most Member States representatives (the UK included) are seeking farreaching changes to undo, or greatly reduce, the linkage between EU and national civil service pay, and to take back responsibility for fixing many details of the system. The European Parliament s Legal Affairs Committee has recently adopted a position which broadly supports the Commission s proposal. It is expected that this will opinion will soon be formally passed to the Council of Ministers. Under the Treaty of Lisbon, the Council no longer has the last word on this matter, as it used to on all administrative issues. The decision in the case of initial disagreement, as seems most likely will be prepared through the conciliation procedure, involving iterative dialogue between the Council and the Parliament. This will be the first time that this has happened in the administrative area. May 2012 Page 5

The Senior European Experts Group is an independent body consisting of former high-ranking British diplomats and civil servants, including several former UK ambassadors to the EU, and former officials of the institutions of the EU. The group provides high-quality, fact based briefing materials on EU issues. senioreuropeanexperts.org info@senioreuropeanexperts.org @SEE_Group Page 6