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Press release - Call to halt new GM maize authorisation

European Parliament (News) - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:13
Plenary sessions : MEPs oppose EU Commission plans to authorise imports of food and feed products derived from or containing a herbicide and pest-resistant genetically modified (GM) maize in a resolution voted on Wednesday. It highlights the lack of data on the many sub-combinations of the variety - all of which would also be authorised - and reiterates Parliament’s call for a reform of the EU’s GMO authorisation procedure.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - Call to halt new GM maize authorisation

European Parliament - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:13
Plenary sessions : MEPs oppose EU Commission plans to authorise imports of food and feed products derived from or containing a herbicide and pest-resistant genetically modified (GM) maize in a resolution voted on Wednesday. It highlights the lack of data on the many sub-combinations of the variety - all of which would also be authorised - and reiterates Parliament’s call for a reform of the EU’s GMO authorisation procedure.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - MEPs back budget flexibility: €6bn more for jobs, growth and tackling migration

European Parliament (News) - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:05
Plenary sessions : Plans to make it easier to move money around within the EU’s long-run budget, to help tackle urgent challenges such as the migration crisis, strengthening security, boosting growth and creating jobs, were backed by Parliament on Wednesday. MEPs have long fought for greater flexibility within the Multi-annual Financial Framework (MFF), which would apply for the remainder of the 2014-2020 MFF.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - MEPs back budget flexibility: €6bn more for jobs, growth and tackling migration

European Parliament - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:05
Plenary sessions : Plans to make it easier to move money around within the EU’s long-run budget, to help tackle urgent challenges such as the migration crisis, strengthening security, boosting growth and creating jobs, were backed by Parliament on Wednesday. MEPs have long fought for greater flexibility within the Multi-annual Financial Framework (MFF), which would apply for the remainder of the 2014-2020 MFF.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - MEPs approve €71.5m in EU aid after natural disasters in UK, Cyprus, Portugal

European Parliament (News) - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:04
Plenary sessions : MEPs have approved €71,524,810 in EU aid to repair damage caused by floods in the UK from December 2015 to January 2016, drought and fires in Cyprus from October 2015 to June 2016 and fires on the Portuguese island of Madeira in August 2016, in a vote on Wednesday. The aid comes from the EU Solidarity Fund (EUSF).

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - MEPs approve €71.5m in EU aid after natural disasters in UK, Cyprus, Portugal

European Parliament - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:04
Plenary sessions : MEPs have approved €71,524,810 in EU aid to repair damage caused by floods in the UK from December 2015 to January 2016, drought and fires in Cyprus from October 2015 to June 2016 and fires on the Portuguese island of Madeira in August 2016, in a vote on Wednesday. The aid comes from the EU Solidarity Fund (EUSF).

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - Brexit: MEPs agree on key conditions for approving UK withdrawal agreement

European Parliament (News) - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:02
Plenary sessions : An overwhelming majority of the house (516 votes in favour, 133 against, with 50 abstentions) adopted a resolution officially laying down the European Parliament’s key principles and conditions for its approval of the UK's withdrawal agreement. Any such agreement at the end of UK-EU negotiations will need to win the approval of the European Parliament.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - Brexit: MEPs agree on key conditions for approving UK withdrawal agreement

European Parliament - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:02
Plenary sessions : An overwhelming majority of the house (516 votes in favour, 133 against, with 50 abstentions) adopted a resolution officially laying down the European Parliament’s key principles and conditions for its approval of the UK's withdrawal agreement. Any such agreement at the end of UK-EU negotiations will need to win the approval of the European Parliament.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

The tax shortfall of the robots

Europe's World - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 13:01

At a recent Friends of Europe roundtable on the 4th Industrial Revolution, Estonian MEP Kaja Kallas put her finger on one of the most alarming threats confronting Europe. It’s hidden from sight, but of profound importance. It’s not the eurozone, nor the EU’s widening north-south gap. In fact, it’s none of the problems making headlines today, but something far more fundamental and scary.

Kallas made the point with an almost century-old anecdote about industrialist Henry Ford and trade union leader Walter Reuther. Ford, showing off his newly-installed automated assembly lines, boasted of the huge boosts these would give to productivity, and therefore profitability.

“Yes,” replied Reuther, “but your robots won’t be buying your cars,” referring to Ford’s famed start-up policy of ensuring that all his employees could buy a car on advantageous terms.

Now, an ageing Europe needs to start planning for how artificial intelligence will change our industrial society – and find its own solutions to the rise of untaxable, non-consuming machines.

The implications of artificial intelligence (AI) and the robotics revolution are especially unsettling for Europe. Debate about the march of the robots has so far centred on whether or not they will destroy jobs and usher in an era of massive long-term structural unemployment. But we should instead be worrying about an opposite effect.

“The implications of artificial intelligence and the robotics revolution are especially unsettling for Europe”

There will of course be disruption as machines take over mechanically routine tasks and even make inroads into sophisticated services currently performed by skilled technicians. The safest jobs probably range from the intellectually creative to the more humdrum, such as plumbers.

But far from there being too many workers, vulnerable to the robots or not, there won’t be enough of them. Robotics may well compensate for dramatic shrinkages of population and of workforces in almost all EU countries, but as Walter Reuther observed, smart machines won’t consume and nor will they pay taxes.

Europe’s demographic outlook is widely ignored. Policymakers tend to shelve ageing and shrinking as problems for tomorrow. But they are very real threats advancing on us at breakneck speed. Despite the attention justly paid to unemployment, especially among young people, Europe has a labour shortage that is rapidly getting worse.

The working age population of the EU, including the UK, is currently 240 million. Immigration, controversial as it is, isn’t keeping up with the rate of retirement.

If migrant job-seekers continue to arrive at their present rate, the European workforce will drop to around 207 million by the middle of this century. That means there won’t be enough people in work with taxable incomes to pay for retirees’ pensions. (And there will be just two workers per pensioner, not the four we currently have.)

“If migrant job-seekers continue to arrive at their present rate, the European workforce will drop to around 207 million by the middle of this century”

No one can yet forecast with any confidence the impact of robots on industrialised societies. Perhaps they’ll help care for our aged populations, while also making us wealthier. But it’s hard to find silver linings to a cloud that consists of untaxable, non-consuming machines along with unstoppable waves of would-be immigrants who lack the skills needed to complement the robots.

The hole in governments’ finances that a reduction of more than 30 million taxpaying workers implies risks crippling Europeans’ cherished social welfare systems. Perhaps the robots’ profitability will fill some of the gap, but these machines will also be available to competitors worldwide. And that also makes it tricky to tax them directly.

On the brighter side, the AI revolution could be turned to advantage if policymakers quickly seize its opportunities. E-learning could teach skills that would transform the economies of developing countries – especially in Africa.

In Europe, where the stakes are so high, a revolution in education is needed to produce a new generation of IT-savvy workers. The first step is for the European Union to focus on this major shift in our industrial society and start planning for it.

Related content:

IMAGE CREDIT: zhudifeng/Bigstock

The post The tax shortfall of the robots appeared first on Europe’s World.

Categories: European Union

Press release - New rules to protect investors and help SMEs access diverse sources of capital

European Parliament (News) - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 12:52
Plenary sessions : Uniform rules on the information given in investor prospectuses were approved by Parliament on Wednesday. They aim to protect investors, create a more efficient single capital market and ease small firms’ access to finance.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - New rules to protect investors and help SMEs access diverse sources of capital

European Parliament - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 12:52
Plenary sessions : Uniform rules on the information given in investor prospectuses were approved by Parliament on Wednesday. They aim to protect investors, create a more efficient single capital market and ease small firms’ access to finance.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - Medical devices: more safety, more traceability

European Parliament (News) - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 12:47
Plenary sessions : Stricter rules to ensure that medical devices such as breast or hip implants are traceable and comply with EU patient safety requirements were backed by MEPs on Wednesday. MEPs also approved laws to tighten up information and ethical requirements for diagnostic medical devices, e.g. for pregnancy or DNA testing.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Press release - Medical devices: more safety, more traceability

European Parliament - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 12:47
Plenary sessions : Stricter rules to ensure that medical devices such as breast or hip implants are traceable and comply with EU patient safety requirements were backed by MEPs on Wednesday. MEPs also approved laws to tighten up information and ethical requirements for diagnostic medical devices, e.g. for pregnancy or DNA testing.

Source : © European Union, 2017 - EP
Categories: European Union

Debate: Poison gas attack in Syria

Eurotopics.net - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 12:30
Dozens of people were killed on Tuesday in the Syrian province of Idlib by what is assumed to be a poison gas attack. Opposition figures in Syria as well as the US, France and Britain have blamed Damascus for the attack. The international community has given Assad carte blanche, some commentators complain. Others don't believe that the Assad regime is behind the attack.
Categories: European Union

Debate: Less mourning for Russian victims of terror?

Eurotopics.net - Wed, 05/04/2017 - 12:30
When terrorist attacks are carried out in Western cities the West always reacts with shock and sympathy: Facebook profiles show mourning symbols and famous buildings - including Berlin's Brandenburg Gate - are lit up in the national colours of the attacked city. Some commentators are appalled that the German capital did not follow this tradition after the attack in St. Petersburg and ask why the sense of shock and dismay seems far less profound after this latest attack.
Categories: European Union

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