BETA


2010/2027(INI) Demographic challenge and solidarity between generations

Progress: Procedure completed

RoleCommitteeRapporteurShadows
Lead EMPL MANN Thomas (icon: PPE PPE)
Committee Opinion FEMM BAUER Edit (icon: PPE PPE) Silvia COSTA (icon: S&D S&D)
Committee Opinion ECON FOX Ashley (icon: ECR ECR)
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 54

Events

2011/04/04
   EC - Commission response to text adopted in plenary
Documents
2010/11/11
   EP - Results of vote in Parliament
2010/11/11
   EP - Decision by Parliament
Details

The European Parliament adopted by 440 votes to 122, with 43 abstentions, a resolution on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations.

The resolution recalls that according to the Commission’s estimates, demographic changes could profoundly change population structure and the age pyramid. The number of young people aged 0 to 14 would drop from 100 million (1975 index) to 66 million in 2050, the working population would peak at 331 million in about 2010 and thereafter decrease steadily (to about 268 million in 2050), while, with life expectancy rising by 6 years for men and 5 years for women between 2004 and 2050, the number of people over 80 would rise from 4.1 % in 2005 to 11.4 % in 2050.

Underlining that the functional cooperation between the generations depends on the basic values of freedom, rights and solidarity, justice and selfless support for the next generation, Parliament considers it important to make clear that older people are not a burden on the economy and society, but rather – through their experience, their achievements, their knowledge and their greater loyalty to their place of work – a dependable asset and significant added value.

The resolution considers it important to fight prejudice and discrimination in all its forms and towards all groups of society and to work towards a society where older people are treated equally as human beings with fundamental rights. Moreover, special attention should be paid to the gender perspective when considering demographic challenge and solidarity.

Education and Training policies : taking into account the EU’s ageing society, Parliament believes that active attempts should be made to bring people on to the labour market and keep them there, applying this approach to all age groups, older people included. It emphasises that lifelong learning must be a central aim in all education-related measures and that it is something for which all generations, the public authorities and businesses bear a responsibility.

Members consider that an employment policy which takes into account the situation of older workers implies reflecting on new ways of organising work in companies , facilitating flexible formulas progressively leading to retirement, reducing stress, improving working conditions and promoting anti-discriminatory practices with regard to recruitment and vocational training.

Parliament believes it is wrong for any older worker to be forced to stop working against their will because of an arbitrarily concluded compulsory retirement age. Therefore, it calls on Member States to look again at the feasibility of scrapping compulsory retirement ages which prevent people who want to carry on working from doing so, while maintaining a pensionable age so that those people who want to retire can do so and still receive their pension and retirement-based benefits.

Parliament is convinced that flexisecurity can contribute to more open, responsive and inclusive labour markets and can ease the transition between the various stages of people’s working lives, in particular when it is based on solidarity and shared responsibility between the generations and when it takes the different demands and needs of all age and income groups into account. They stress that career and training security should be fully guaranteed and that everyone should be able to have a full and uninterrupted working life, entitling them to a full-rate pension. Members stress that European economies faced with demographic challenges need competitive companies resulting from low fiscal and bureaucratic burden and reformed state sector .

The resolution calls on the EU to pursue an effective policy to ensure that older workers can remain available for work and are not subject to age discrimination. It calls for promoting a culture which provides for the management of ageing in companies , both for the arrival of young people and for the departure of older workers.

Transparency initiative : the resolution calls on the Commission and the Council to introduce generational accounting to inform and further develop the Eurostat sustainable development indicators (SDIs) in all the Member States and at EU level, with a view to producing reliable models and forecasts of payment flows and the degree to which each generation will benefit or be burdened. It advocates a compulsory ‘generation check’ impact assessment to make clear the effects of EU and national legislation on justice between the generations and to permit long-term cost-benefit analysis.

European Youth Guarantee initiative : emphasising that youth unemployment is one of our most pressing problems, Parliament invites the Council and the Commission to make particular efforts and to devise practical measures – one of which should be a European Youth Guarantee – to ensure that, after a maximum period of four months’ unemployment, young people are offered a job, an apprenticeship, additional training or combined work and training, with the proviso that those concerned support the process of their integration into work through their own efforts. It is also necessary to give young unemployed workers the advice, the guidance and the aid they require in order to get them back into work (or into work for the first time), and the same for students or future students, so that they can choose their career path in full knowledge of the potential job opportunities.

Fifty-plus employment pact initiative : Members call on the Member States and the Commission to ensure that the following aims are achieved under an expanded EU-2020 strategy: (i) securing full employment among the population aged over 50 up to the legal retirement age and achieving the minimum of 55 % employment; (ii) eliminating incentives e.g. for early retirement; (iii) combating age discrimination; (iv) setting country-specific targets for access to training and lifelong learning for older workers; v) combating age-based discrimination in the workplace and training and developing incentives for workers over the age of 60 to remain available for work, so that they can pass on their knowledge and experience to subsequent generations, which will require the Member States to adopt appropriate legislation designed to promote the recruitment of such people by companies; (vi) supporting the (re)integration of older people who become disabled, rather than classifying them as ‘disabled’.

Age Management initiative : Parliament argues that older people’s employability also depends on initiatives in the fields of health, the level of income and contributions in cash and in kind in comparison to pension and other retirement benefits, further training, working-time patterns, autonomy and individual choice for workers, better work-life balance, job satisfaction and management behaviour, as well as a guarantee of reasonable accommodation, and in the field of accessibility, and that such initiatives should be devised jointly by the social partners, where applicable, for all employees and promoted by the Commission and Member States.

Intergenerational tandem initiative : the resolution calls for specific initiatives to promote mixed-age teams for work processes and suggests that companies taking such initiatives should be supported and that outstanding projects should receive recognition, highlighting how the varying distribution of generations increases competitiveness and harmonious growth.

Guaranteeing a decent pension’ initiative : Parliament is convinced that the right to retire is a right that any employee is entitled to claim after the legal retirement age set by each Member State in consultation with the social partners and in accordance with national practices. It considers that, should they decide not to extend their working lives beyond the national retirement age, this must not affect their pension rights or other social rights. It calls on the Council and the Member States to conduct an impartial review of upper age-limits for certain jobs and posts and for eligibility for funding and concluding insurance policies, no later than 2012, and to do away with such limits.

‘Active Ageing’ initiative : Parliament calls on the Commission to conduct a review of activities related to healthy ageing and to present an action plan in 2011 for: (i) enhancing older people’s dignity, health, quality of life, and autonomy; (ii) allowing them equal access to health care regardless of income; (iii) highlighting in particular the health risks for people who suddenly cease being active; (iv) emphasising prevention of health problems, which requires the Member States to support healthy lifestyles and take appropriate measures to reduce smoking, alcohol misuse, obesity and other major health risks.

The resolution calls on the Commission to develop a proposal for 2012 as the ‘European Year of Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations’. It also calls on the Council and the Member States to take rapid measures to guarantee decent pensions for all, which must not in any circumstances lie below the poverty level.

Reconciliation policies : Parliament emphasises that in order to avoid a disproportionate burden on women because of an increased demand for care in an ageing society, labour and care should be rendered compatible for both men and women in all Member States and equally distributed between women and men. It encourages the Member States to enter into permanent long-term commitments to the family, including entitlement to additional allowances for parents, especially additional measures to support single mothers, and tax or social relief for crèches and for voluntary, cooperative and charitable organisations. The resolution calls on the Member States to ensure accessible, affordable, flexible and high-quality services, and in particular access to childcare facilities, aiming to ensure conditions for the provision of 50 % of necessary care for children aged up to three years and 100 % of care for three-to-six-year-olds, as well as improved access to care for other dependents and adequate leave arrangements for both mothers and fathers.

Economic and growth policies : Members take the view that tapping into new markets in the ‘silver economy’ offers a major opportunity for improving competitiveness and innovative potential and for boosting growth and employment and for increasing volunteering. They consider that one means of tackling the digital divide – a phenomenon that particularly affects women, especially older women, and leads to professional and social exclusion – would be for schools to organise experimental IT literacy initiatives. They believe that the agreement of strong new antidiscrimination legislation in the access to goods and services will offer a major opportunity for economic growth and employment, as the barriers faced by older people to certain services and goods are dismantled. They call for an end to any unreasonable or unfair blanket bans on goods and services based on age alone, which many older people face when trying to purchase insurance, holidays or car rentals, for example.

Member States are called upon to put in place framework conditions, and particularly to take innovative and barrier-free measures, that reflect differing regional conditions in this regard.

Pension and budgetary policies : Members consider that an ageing population coupled with a declining birth-rate within Europe represents a fundamental demographic change which will require reform of the welfare and fiscal systems of Europe, including pension systems, providing good care for older generations whilst avoiding the accumulation of a debt burden for younger generations. They encourage reform of the stability and growth pact, so that Member States can fulfil their obligation to make their pension systems more sustainable.

Noting that numerous issues relating to demographic change in society fall exclusively within the competence of the Member States, the resolution recognises the need for each Member State to take action to ensure its public finances are sustainable and can adequately manage demographic change.

The resolution encourages Member States to support all families within their tax and benefits systems and to promote the provision of childcare services to families with small children. It also encourages Member States to remove all disincentives, particularly in relation to tax and pensions, for older people to continue working beyond retirement age.

Migration policies : Members consider that migration combined with successful integration, including economic integration, can be one of the ways of coping with demographic change. They are convinced that open and sincere debate is essential in order to discuss different immigration policies. They consider that a sense of identification in accordance with democratic traditions and fundamental constitutional values, participation based on equal opportunities and responsibility are prerequisites for successful integration, that integration can work only where immigrants are prepared to adapt and locals are receptive, and that solidarity between generations is complemented by solidarity between cultures, which implies the removal of prejudices about different cultures.

Health and Care policies : the resolution calls attention to the severe regional imbalances apparent in terms of demographic change, and the fact that it sets in train processes of migration away from rural and peripheral regions, with the result that structural transformations in social and health care must be envisaged, funding must be made available for them, and an intensive exchange of best practices and those which support developments and services based on modern information and communications technologies must be undertaken.

Recognising what has been achieved by the Member States in the field of care for older people, Members call however on them to bring greater attention than hitherto to bear on the enforcement of, and compliance with, quality criteria for service provision. They call, through the open method of communication, for an exchange of information and best practice between Member States on the provision of long-term care for older people and, in particular, measures to safeguard older people in the community and in care homes and to tackle abuse of the elderly.

Lastly, Parliament takes the view that an EU-wide code of conduct for the provision of long-term care, outlining minimum guidelines and service outcomes, needs to be drawn up and to be adopted by Parliament and the Council.

Documents
2010/11/11
   EP - End of procedure in Parliament
2010/11/10
   EP - Debate in Parliament
2010/10/06
   EP - Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
Documents
2010/10/06
   EP - Committee report tabled for plenary
Documents
2010/09/30
   EP - Vote in committee
Details

The Committee on Employment and Social Affairs adopted the own-initiative report by Thomas MANN (EPP, DE) on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations.

The report recalls that according to the Commission’s estimates, demographic changes could profoundly change population structure and the age pyramid. The number of young people aged 0 to 14 would drop from 100 million (1975 index) to 66 million in 2050, the working population would peak at 331 million in about 2010 and thereafter decrease steadily (to about 268 million in 2050), while, with life expectancy rising by 6 years for men and 5 years for women between 2004 and 2050, the number of people over 80 would rise from 4.1 % in 2005 to 11.4 % in 2050.

Underlining that the functional cooperation between the generations depends on the basic values of freedom, rights and solidarity, justice and selfless support for the next generation, Members consider it important to make clear that older people are not a burden on the economy and society, but rather – through their experience, their achievements, their knowledge and their greater loyalty to their place of work – a dependable asset and significant added value.

The report considers it important to fight prejudice and discrimination in all its forms and towards all groups of society and to work towards a society where older people are treated equally as human beings with fundamental rights. Moreover, special attention should be paid to the gender perspective when considering demographic challenge and solidarity.

Education and Training policies : taking into account the EU’s ageing society, Members believe that active attempts should be made to bring people on to the labour market and keep them there, applying this approach to all age groups, older people included. It emphasises that lifelong learning must be a central aim in all education-related measures and that it is something for which all generations, the public authorities and businesses bear a responsibility.

Members consider that an employment policy which takes into account the situation of older workers implies reflecting on new ways of organising work in companies , facilitating flexible formulas progressively leading to retirement, reducing stress, improving working conditions and promoting anti-discriminatory practices with regard to recruitment and vocational training.

The committee believes it is wrong for any older worker to be forced to stop working against their will because of an arbitrarily concluded compulsory retirement age. Therefore, it calls on Member States to look again at the feasibility of scrapping compulsory retirement ages.

In this regard, it considers that any measures concerning the retirement age should be based on the needs of the persons concerned.

Members are convinced that flexisecurity can contribute to more open, responsive and inclusive labour markets and can ease the transition between the various stages of people’s working lives, in particular when it is based on solidarity and shared responsibility between the generations and when it takes the different demands and needs of all age and income groups into account. They stress that career and training security should be fully guaranteed and that everyone should be able to have a full and uninterrupted working life, entitling them to a full-rate pension.

The report calls on the EU to pursue an effective policy to ensure that older workers can remain available for work and are not subject to age discrimination. It calls for promoting a culture which provides for the management of ageing in companies , both for the arrival of young people and for the departure of older workers.

Transparency initiative : the report calls on the Commission and the Council to introduce generational accounting to inform and further develop the Eurostat sustainable development indicators (SDIs) in all the Member States and at EU level, with a view to producing reliable models and forecasts of payment flows and the degree to which each generation will benefit or be burdened. It advocates a compulsory ‘generation check’ impact assessment to make clear the effects of EU and national legislation on justice between the generations and to permit long-term cost-benefit analysis.

European Youth Guarantee initiative : emphasising that youth unemployment is one of our most pressing problems, the report invites the Council and the Commission to make particular efforts and to devise practical measures – one of which should be a European Youth Guarantee – to ensure that, after a maximum period of four months’ unemployment, young people are offered a job, an apprenticeship, additional training or combined work and training, with the proviso that those concerned support the process of their integration into work through their own efforts. It is also necessary to give young unemployed workers the advice, the guidance and the aid they require in order to get them back into work (or into work for the first time), and the same for students or future students, so that they can choose their career path in full knowledge of the potential job opportunities.

Fifty-plus employment pact initiative : the report calls on the Member States and the Commission to ensure that the following aims are achieved under an expanded EU-2020 strategy: (i) securing full employment among the population aged over 50 up to the legal retirement age and achieving the minimum of 55 % employment; (ii) eliminating incentives e.g. for early retirement; (iii) combating age discrimination; (iv) setting country-specific targets for access to training and lifelong learning for older workers; v) combating age-based discrimination in the workplace and training and developing incentives for workers over the age of 60 to remain available for work, so that they can pass on their knowledge and experience to subsequent generations, which will require the Member States to adopt appropriate legislation designed to promote the recruitment of such people by companies; (vi) supporting the (re)integration of older people who become disabled, rather than classifying them as ‘disabled’.

Age Management initiative : Members argue that older people’s employability also depends on initiatives in the fields of health, the level of income and contributions in cash and in kind in comparison to pension and other retirement benefits, further training, working-time patterns, autonomy and individual choice for workers, better work-life balance, job satisfaction and management behaviour, as well as a guarantee of reasonable accommodation, and in the field of accessibility, and that such initiatives should be devised jointly by the social partners, where applicable, for all employees and promoted by the Commission and Member States.

Intergenerational tandem initiative : the report calls for specific initiatives to promote mixed-age teams for work processes and suggests that companies taking such initiatives should be supported and that outstanding projects should receive recognition, highlighting how the varying distribution of generations increases competitiveness and harmonious growth.

‘Guaranteeing a decent pension’ initiative : the committee is convinced that the right to retire is a right that any employee is entitled to claim after the legal retirement age set by each Member State in consultation with the social partners and in accordance with national practices. It considers that, should they decide not to extend their working lives beyond the national retirement age, this must not affect their pension rights or other social rights.

‘Active Ageing’ initiative : the report calls on the Commission to conduct a review of activities related to healthy ageing and to present an action plan in 2011 for: (i) enhancing older people’s dignity, health, quality of life, and autonomy; (ii) allowing them equal access to health care regardless of income; (iii) highlighting in particular the health risks for people who suddenly cease being active; (iv) emphasising prevention of health problems, which requires the Member States to support healthy lifestyles and take appropriate measures to reduce smoking, alcohol misuse, obesity and other major health risks.

The report also calls on the Commission to develop a proposal for 2012 as the ‘European Year of Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations’. It also calls on the Council and the Member States to take rapid measures to guarantee decent pensions for all, which must not in any circumstances lie below the poverty level.

Reconciliation policies : the report emphasises that in order to avoid a disproportionate burden on women because of an increased demand for care in an ageing society, labour and care should be rendered compatible for both men and women in all Member States and equally distributed between women and men. It encourages the Member States to enter into permanent long-term commitments to the family, including entitlement to additional allowances for parents, especially additional measures to support single mothers, and tax or social relief for crèches and for voluntary, cooperative and charitable organisations. The report calls on the Member States to ensure accessible, affordable, flexible and high-quality services, and in particular access to childcare facilities, aiming to ensure conditions for the provision of 50 % of necessary care for children aged up to three years and 100 % of care for three-to-six-year-olds, as well as improved access to care for other dependents and adequate leave arrangements for both mothers and fathers.

Economic and growth policies : Members take the view that tapping into new markets in the ‘silver economy’ offers a major opportunity for improving competitiveness and innovative potential and for boosting growth and employment and for increasing volunteering. They consider that one means of tackling the digital divide – a phenomenon that particularly affects women, especially older women, and leads to professional and social exclusion – would be for schools to organise experimental IT literacy initiatives. They believe that the agreement of strong new antidiscrimination legislation in the access to goods and services will offer a major opportunity for economic growth and employment, as the barriers faced by older people to certain services and goods are dismantled. They call for an end to any unreasonable or unfair blanket bans on goods and services based on age alone, which many older people face when trying to purchase insurance, holidays or car rentals, for example.

Member States are called upon to put in place framework conditions, and particularly to take innovative and barrier-free measures, that reflect differing regional conditions in this regard.

Pension and budgetary policies : the report considers that an ageing population coupled with a declining birth-rate within Europe represents a fundamental demographic change which will require reform of the welfare and fiscal systems of Europe, including pension systems, providing good care for older generations whilst avoiding the accumulation of a debt burden for younger generations. They encourage reform of the stability and growth pact, so that Member States can fulfil their obligation to make their pension systems more sustainable.

Noting that numerous issues relating to demographic change in society fall exclusively within the competence of the Member States, the report recognises the need for each Member State to take action to ensure its public finances are sustainable and can adequately manage demographic change. The Commission is called upon to provide continuous intergenerational accounting, including estimates on future debt burdens and sustainability gaps in public finances of the Member States, and to make the results publicly available in a way that is easily accessible and understandable. The Commission and the Member States are called upon to re-examine welfare systems where they still entail considerable inequalities between men’s and women’s pension levels, and to consider the options of introducing corrective factors taking account of the gaps in contributions arising from temporary employment or maternal responsibilities.

The report stresses the need to encourage private pension provision and to ensure that on average public sector pensions are no more generous, both in terms of contributions and benefits, than comparable private sector pensions. It encourages Member States to remove all disincentives, particularly in relation to tax and pensions, for older people to continue working beyond retirement age.

Migration policies : Members consider that migration combined with successful integration, including economic integration, can be one of the ways of coping with demographic change. They are convinced that open and sincere debate is essential in order to discuss different immigration policies. They consider that a sense of identification in accordance with democratic traditions and fundamental constitutional values, participation based on equal opportunities and responsibility are prerequisites for successful integration, that integration can work only where immigrants are prepared to adapt and locals are receptive, and that solidarity between generations is complemented by solidarity between cultures, which implies the removal of prejudices about different cultures.

Health and Care policies : the report calls attention to the severe regional imbalances apparent in terms of demographic change, and the fact that it sets in train processes of migration away from rural and peripheral regions, with the result that structural transformations in social and health care must be envisaged, funding must be made available for them, and an intensive exchange of best practices and those which support developments and services based on modern information and communications technologies must be undertaken.

Recognising what has been achieved by the Member States in the field of care for older people, Members call however on them to bring greater attention than hitherto to bear on the enforcement of, and compliance with, quality criteria for service provision. They call, through the open method of communication, for an exchange of information and best practice between Member States on the provision of long-term care for older people and, in particular, measures to safeguard older people in the community and in care homes and to tackle abuse of the elderly.

Lastly, Members take the view that an EU-wide code of conduct for the provision of long-term care, outlining minimum guidelines and service outcomes, needs to be drawn up and to be adopted by Parliament and the Council.

2010/09/14
   EP - Committee opinion
Documents
2010/07/15
   EP - Committee opinion
Documents
2010/06/30
   EP - Amendments tabled in committee
Documents
2010/05/10
   EP - Committee draft report
Documents
2010/02/11
   EP - Committee referral announced in Parliament
2010/02/11
   EP - Referral to associated committees announced in Parliament
2009/11/30
   EP - BAUER Edit (PPE) appointed as rapporteur in FEMM
2009/11/24
   EP - FOX Ashley (ECR) appointed as rapporteur in ECON
2009/10/22
   EP - MANN Thomas (PPE) appointed as rapporteur in EMPL

Documents

Activities

AmendmentsDossier
306 2010/2027(INI)
2010/06/09 ECON 30 amendments...
source: PE-442.927
2010/06/15 EMPL 253 amendments...
source: PE-442.919
2010/06/30 FEMM 23 amendments...
source: PE-445.642

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

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http://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-7-2010-0400_EN.html
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  • date: 2010-02-11T00:00:00 body: EP type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: ECON date: 2009-11-24T00:00:00 committee_full: Economic and Monetary Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: ECR name: FOX Ashley body: EP responsible: True committee: EMPL date: 2009-10-22T00:00:00 committee_full: Employment and Social Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: PPE name: MANN Thomas body: EP responsible: False committee: FEMM date: 2009-11-30T00:00:00 committee_full: Women's Rights and Gender Equality rapporteur: group: PPE name: BAUER Edit
  • date: 2010-09-30T00:00:00 body: EP committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: ECON date: 2009-11-24T00:00:00 committee_full: Economic and Monetary Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: ECR name: FOX Ashley body: EP responsible: True committee: EMPL date: 2009-10-22T00:00:00 committee_full: Employment and Social Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: PPE name: MANN Thomas body: EP responsible: False committee: FEMM date: 2009-11-30T00:00:00 committee_full: Women's Rights and Gender Equality rapporteur: group: PPE name: BAUER Edit type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
  • date: 2010-10-06T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2010-268&language=EN type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading title: A7-0268/2010 body: EP type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • date: 2010-11-10T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20101110&type=CRE type: Debate in Parliament title: Debate in Parliament body: EP type: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2010-11-11T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=18878&l=en type: Results of vote in Parliament title: Results of vote in Parliament url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2010-400 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading title: T7-0400/2010 body: EP type: Results of vote in Parliament
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docs
  • date: 2010-05-10T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE441.184 title: PE441.184 type: Committee draft report body: EP
  • date: 2010-06-30T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE442.919 title: PE442.919 type: Amendments tabled in committee body: EP
  • date: 2010-07-15T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE442.891&secondRef=02 title: PE442.891 committee: FEMM type: Committee opinion body: EP
  • date: 2010-09-14T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=COMPARL&mode=XML&language=EN&reference=PE441.298&secondRef=03 title: PE441.298 committee: ECON type: Committee opinion body: EP
  • date: 2010-10-06T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2010-268&language=EN title: A7-0268/2010 type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading body: EP
  • date: 2011-04-04T00:00:00 docs: url: /oeil/spdoc.do?i=18878&j=0&l=en title: SP(2011)1475/2 type: Commission response to text adopted in plenary
events
  • date: 2010-02-11T00:00:00 type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading body: EP
  • date: 2010-02-11T00:00:00 type: Referral to associated committees announced in Parliament body: EP
  • date: 2010-09-30T00:00:00 type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading body: EP summary: The Committee on Employment and Social Affairs adopted the own-initiative report by Thomas MANN (EPP, DE) on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations. The report recalls that according to the Commission’s estimates, demographic changes could profoundly change population structure and the age pyramid. The number of young people aged 0 to 14 would drop from 100 million (1975 index) to 66 million in 2050, the working population would peak at 331 million in about 2010 and thereafter decrease steadily (to about 268 million in 2050), while, with life expectancy rising by 6 years for men and 5 years for women between 2004 and 2050, the number of people over 80 would rise from 4.1 % in 2005 to 11.4 % in 2050. Underlining that the functional cooperation between the generations depends on the basic values of freedom, rights and solidarity, justice and selfless support for the next generation, Members consider it important to make clear that older people are not a burden on the economy and society, but rather – through their experience, their achievements, their knowledge and their greater loyalty to their place of work – a dependable asset and significant added value. The report considers it important to fight prejudice and discrimination in all its forms and towards all groups of society and to work towards a society where older people are treated equally as human beings with fundamental rights. Moreover, special attention should be paid to the gender perspective when considering demographic challenge and solidarity. Education and Training policies : taking into account the EU’s ageing society, Members believe that active attempts should be made to bring people on to the labour market and keep them there, applying this approach to all age groups, older people included. It emphasises that lifelong learning must be a central aim in all education-related measures and that it is something for which all generations, the public authorities and businesses bear a responsibility. Members consider that an employment policy which takes into account the situation of older workers implies reflecting on new ways of organising work in companies , facilitating flexible formulas progressively leading to retirement, reducing stress, improving working conditions and promoting anti-discriminatory practices with regard to recruitment and vocational training. The committee believes it is wrong for any older worker to be forced to stop working against their will because of an arbitrarily concluded compulsory retirement age. Therefore, it calls on Member States to look again at the feasibility of scrapping compulsory retirement ages. In this regard, it considers that any measures concerning the retirement age should be based on the needs of the persons concerned. Members are convinced that flexisecurity can contribute to more open, responsive and inclusive labour markets and can ease the transition between the various stages of people’s working lives, in particular when it is based on solidarity and shared responsibility between the generations and when it takes the different demands and needs of all age and income groups into account. They stress that career and training security should be fully guaranteed and that everyone should be able to have a full and uninterrupted working life, entitling them to a full-rate pension. The report calls on the EU to pursue an effective policy to ensure that older workers can remain available for work and are not subject to age discrimination. It calls for promoting a culture which provides for the management of ageing in companies , both for the arrival of young people and for the departure of older workers. Transparency initiative : the report calls on the Commission and the Council to introduce generational accounting to inform and further develop the Eurostat sustainable development indicators (SDIs) in all the Member States and at EU level, with a view to producing reliable models and forecasts of payment flows and the degree to which each generation will benefit or be burdened. It advocates a compulsory ‘generation check’ impact assessment to make clear the effects of EU and national legislation on justice between the generations and to permit long-term cost-benefit analysis. European Youth Guarantee initiative : emphasising that youth unemployment is one of our most pressing problems, the report invites the Council and the Commission to make particular efforts and to devise practical measures – one of which should be a European Youth Guarantee – to ensure that, after a maximum period of four months’ unemployment, young people are offered a job, an apprenticeship, additional training or combined work and training, with the proviso that those concerned support the process of their integration into work through their own efforts. It is also necessary to give young unemployed workers the advice, the guidance and the aid they require in order to get them back into work (or into work for the first time), and the same for students or future students, so that they can choose their career path in full knowledge of the potential job opportunities. Fifty-plus employment pact initiative : the report calls on the Member States and the Commission to ensure that the following aims are achieved under an expanded EU-2020 strategy: (i) securing full employment among the population aged over 50 up to the legal retirement age and achieving the minimum of 55 % employment; (ii) eliminating incentives e.g. for early retirement; (iii) combating age discrimination; (iv) setting country-specific targets for access to training and lifelong learning for older workers; v) combating age-based discrimination in the workplace and training and developing incentives for workers over the age of 60 to remain available for work, so that they can pass on their knowledge and experience to subsequent generations, which will require the Member States to adopt appropriate legislation designed to promote the recruitment of such people by companies; (vi) supporting the (re)integration of older people who become disabled, rather than classifying them as ‘disabled’. Age Management initiative : Members argue that older people’s employability also depends on initiatives in the fields of health, the level of income and contributions in cash and in kind in comparison to pension and other retirement benefits, further training, working-time patterns, autonomy and individual choice for workers, better work-life balance, job satisfaction and management behaviour, as well as a guarantee of reasonable accommodation, and in the field of accessibility, and that such initiatives should be devised jointly by the social partners, where applicable, for all employees and promoted by the Commission and Member States. Intergenerational tandem initiative : the report calls for specific initiatives to promote mixed-age teams for work processes and suggests that companies taking such initiatives should be supported and that outstanding projects should receive recognition, highlighting how the varying distribution of generations increases competitiveness and harmonious growth. ‘Guaranteeing a decent pension’ initiative : the committee is convinced that the right to retire is a right that any employee is entitled to claim after the legal retirement age set by each Member State in consultation with the social partners and in accordance with national practices. It considers that, should they decide not to extend their working lives beyond the national retirement age, this must not affect their pension rights or other social rights. ‘Active Ageing’ initiative : the report calls on the Commission to conduct a review of activities related to healthy ageing and to present an action plan in 2011 for: (i) enhancing older people’s dignity, health, quality of life, and autonomy; (ii) allowing them equal access to health care regardless of income; (iii) highlighting in particular the health risks for people who suddenly cease being active; (iv) emphasising prevention of health problems, which requires the Member States to support healthy lifestyles and take appropriate measures to reduce smoking, alcohol misuse, obesity and other major health risks. The report also calls on the Commission to develop a proposal for 2012 as the ‘European Year of Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations’. It also calls on the Council and the Member States to take rapid measures to guarantee decent pensions for all, which must not in any circumstances lie below the poverty level. Reconciliation policies : the report emphasises that in order to avoid a disproportionate burden on women because of an increased demand for care in an ageing society, labour and care should be rendered compatible for both men and women in all Member States and equally distributed between women and men. It encourages the Member States to enter into permanent long-term commitments to the family, including entitlement to additional allowances for parents, especially additional measures to support single mothers, and tax or social relief for crèches and for voluntary, cooperative and charitable organisations. The report calls on the Member States to ensure accessible, affordable, flexible and high-quality services, and in particular access to childcare facilities, aiming to ensure conditions for the provision of 50 % of necessary care for children aged up to three years and 100 % of care for three-to-six-year-olds, as well as improved access to care for other dependents and adequate leave arrangements for both mothers and fathers. Economic and growth policies : Members take the view that tapping into new markets in the ‘silver economy’ offers a major opportunity for improving competitiveness and innovative potential and for boosting growth and employment and for increasing volunteering. They consider that one means of tackling the digital divide – a phenomenon that particularly affects women, especially older women, and leads to professional and social exclusion – would be for schools to organise experimental IT literacy initiatives. They believe that the agreement of strong new antidiscrimination legislation in the access to goods and services will offer a major opportunity for economic growth and employment, as the barriers faced by older people to certain services and goods are dismantled. They call for an end to any unreasonable or unfair blanket bans on goods and services based on age alone, which many older people face when trying to purchase insurance, holidays or car rentals, for example. Member States are called upon to put in place framework conditions, and particularly to take innovative and barrier-free measures, that reflect differing regional conditions in this regard. Pension and budgetary policies : the report considers that an ageing population coupled with a declining birth-rate within Europe represents a fundamental demographic change which will require reform of the welfare and fiscal systems of Europe, including pension systems, providing good care for older generations whilst avoiding the accumulation of a debt burden for younger generations. They encourage reform of the stability and growth pact, so that Member States can fulfil their obligation to make their pension systems more sustainable. Noting that numerous issues relating to demographic change in society fall exclusively within the competence of the Member States, the report recognises the need for each Member State to take action to ensure its public finances are sustainable and can adequately manage demographic change. The Commission is called upon to provide continuous intergenerational accounting, including estimates on future debt burdens and sustainability gaps in public finances of the Member States, and to make the results publicly available in a way that is easily accessible and understandable. The Commission and the Member States are called upon to re-examine welfare systems where they still entail considerable inequalities between men’s and women’s pension levels, and to consider the options of introducing corrective factors taking account of the gaps in contributions arising from temporary employment or maternal responsibilities. The report stresses the need to encourage private pension provision and to ensure that on average public sector pensions are no more generous, both in terms of contributions and benefits, than comparable private sector pensions. It encourages Member States to remove all disincentives, particularly in relation to tax and pensions, for older people to continue working beyond retirement age. Migration policies : Members consider that migration combined with successful integration, including economic integration, can be one of the ways of coping with demographic change. They are convinced that open and sincere debate is essential in order to discuss different immigration policies. They consider that a sense of identification in accordance with democratic traditions and fundamental constitutional values, participation based on equal opportunities and responsibility are prerequisites for successful integration, that integration can work only where immigrants are prepared to adapt and locals are receptive, and that solidarity between generations is complemented by solidarity between cultures, which implies the removal of prejudices about different cultures. Health and Care policies : the report calls attention to the severe regional imbalances apparent in terms of demographic change, and the fact that it sets in train processes of migration away from rural and peripheral regions, with the result that structural transformations in social and health care must be envisaged, funding must be made available for them, and an intensive exchange of best practices and those which support developments and services based on modern information and communications technologies must be undertaken. Recognising what has been achieved by the Member States in the field of care for older people, Members call however on them to bring greater attention than hitherto to bear on the enforcement of, and compliance with, quality criteria for service provision. They call, through the open method of communication, for an exchange of information and best practice between Member States on the provision of long-term care for older people and, in particular, measures to safeguard older people in the community and in care homes and to tackle abuse of the elderly. Lastly, Members take the view that an EU-wide code of conduct for the provision of long-term care, outlining minimum guidelines and service outcomes, needs to be drawn up and to be adopted by Parliament and the Council.
  • date: 2010-10-06T00:00:00 type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2010-268&language=EN title: A7-0268/2010
  • date: 2010-11-10T00:00:00 type: Debate in Parliament body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20101110&type=CRE title: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2010-11-11T00:00:00 type: Results of vote in Parliament body: EP docs: url: https://oeil.secure.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=18878&l=en title: Results of vote in Parliament
  • date: 2010-11-11T00:00:00 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2010-400 title: T7-0400/2010 summary: The European Parliament adopted by 440 votes to 122, with 43 abstentions, a resolution on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations. The resolution recalls that according to the Commission’s estimates, demographic changes could profoundly change population structure and the age pyramid. The number of young people aged 0 to 14 would drop from 100 million (1975 index) to 66 million in 2050, the working population would peak at 331 million in about 2010 and thereafter decrease steadily (to about 268 million in 2050), while, with life expectancy rising by 6 years for men and 5 years for women between 2004 and 2050, the number of people over 80 would rise from 4.1 % in 2005 to 11.4 % in 2050. Underlining that the functional cooperation between the generations depends on the basic values of freedom, rights and solidarity, justice and selfless support for the next generation, Parliament considers it important to make clear that older people are not a burden on the economy and society, but rather – through their experience, their achievements, their knowledge and their greater loyalty to their place of work – a dependable asset and significant added value. The resolution considers it important to fight prejudice and discrimination in all its forms and towards all groups of society and to work towards a society where older people are treated equally as human beings with fundamental rights. Moreover, special attention should be paid to the gender perspective when considering demographic challenge and solidarity. Education and Training policies : taking into account the EU’s ageing society, Parliament believes that active attempts should be made to bring people on to the labour market and keep them there, applying this approach to all age groups, older people included. It emphasises that lifelong learning must be a central aim in all education-related measures and that it is something for which all generations, the public authorities and businesses bear a responsibility. Members consider that an employment policy which takes into account the situation of older workers implies reflecting on new ways of organising work in companies , facilitating flexible formulas progressively leading to retirement, reducing stress, improving working conditions and promoting anti-discriminatory practices with regard to recruitment and vocational training. Parliament believes it is wrong for any older worker to be forced to stop working against their will because of an arbitrarily concluded compulsory retirement age. Therefore, it calls on Member States to look again at the feasibility of scrapping compulsory retirement ages which prevent people who want to carry on working from doing so, while maintaining a pensionable age so that those people who want to retire can do so and still receive their pension and retirement-based benefits. Parliament is convinced that flexisecurity can contribute to more open, responsive and inclusive labour markets and can ease the transition between the various stages of people’s working lives, in particular when it is based on solidarity and shared responsibility between the generations and when it takes the different demands and needs of all age and income groups into account. They stress that career and training security should be fully guaranteed and that everyone should be able to have a full and uninterrupted working life, entitling them to a full-rate pension. Members stress that European economies faced with demographic challenges need competitive companies resulting from low fiscal and bureaucratic burden and reformed state sector . The resolution calls on the EU to pursue an effective policy to ensure that older workers can remain available for work and are not subject to age discrimination. It calls for promoting a culture which provides for the management of ageing in companies , both for the arrival of young people and for the departure of older workers. Transparency initiative : the resolution calls on the Commission and the Council to introduce generational accounting to inform and further develop the Eurostat sustainable development indicators (SDIs) in all the Member States and at EU level, with a view to producing reliable models and forecasts of payment flows and the degree to which each generation will benefit or be burdened. It advocates a compulsory ‘generation check’ impact assessment to make clear the effects of EU and national legislation on justice between the generations and to permit long-term cost-benefit analysis. European Youth Guarantee initiative : emphasising that youth unemployment is one of our most pressing problems, Parliament invites the Council and the Commission to make particular efforts and to devise practical measures – one of which should be a European Youth Guarantee – to ensure that, after a maximum period of four months’ unemployment, young people are offered a job, an apprenticeship, additional training or combined work and training, with the proviso that those concerned support the process of their integration into work through their own efforts. It is also necessary to give young unemployed workers the advice, the guidance and the aid they require in order to get them back into work (or into work for the first time), and the same for students or future students, so that they can choose their career path in full knowledge of the potential job opportunities. Fifty-plus employment pact initiative : Members call on the Member States and the Commission to ensure that the following aims are achieved under an expanded EU-2020 strategy: (i) securing full employment among the population aged over 50 up to the legal retirement age and achieving the minimum of 55 % employment; (ii) eliminating incentives e.g. for early retirement; (iii) combating age discrimination; (iv) setting country-specific targets for access to training and lifelong learning for older workers; v) combating age-based discrimination in the workplace and training and developing incentives for workers over the age of 60 to remain available for work, so that they can pass on their knowledge and experience to subsequent generations, which will require the Member States to adopt appropriate legislation designed to promote the recruitment of such people by companies; (vi) supporting the (re)integration of older people who become disabled, rather than classifying them as ‘disabled’. Age Management initiative : Parliament argues that older people’s employability also depends on initiatives in the fields of health, the level of income and contributions in cash and in kind in comparison to pension and other retirement benefits, further training, working-time patterns, autonomy and individual choice for workers, better work-life balance, job satisfaction and management behaviour, as well as a guarantee of reasonable accommodation, and in the field of accessibility, and that such initiatives should be devised jointly by the social partners, where applicable, for all employees and promoted by the Commission and Member States. Intergenerational tandem initiative : the resolution calls for specific initiatives to promote mixed-age teams for work processes and suggests that companies taking such initiatives should be supported and that outstanding projects should receive recognition, highlighting how the varying distribution of generations increases competitiveness and harmonious growth. Guaranteeing a decent pension’ initiative : Parliament is convinced that the right to retire is a right that any employee is entitled to claim after the legal retirement age set by each Member State in consultation with the social partners and in accordance with national practices. It considers that, should they decide not to extend their working lives beyond the national retirement age, this must not affect their pension rights or other social rights. It calls on the Council and the Member States to conduct an impartial review of upper age-limits for certain jobs and posts and for eligibility for funding and concluding insurance policies, no later than 2012, and to do away with such limits. ‘Active Ageing’ initiative : Parliament calls on the Commission to conduct a review of activities related to healthy ageing and to present an action plan in 2011 for: (i) enhancing older people’s dignity, health, quality of life, and autonomy; (ii) allowing them equal access to health care regardless of income; (iii) highlighting in particular the health risks for people who suddenly cease being active; (iv) emphasising prevention of health problems, which requires the Member States to support healthy lifestyles and take appropriate measures to reduce smoking, alcohol misuse, obesity and other major health risks. The resolution calls on the Commission to develop a proposal for 2012 as the ‘European Year of Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations’. It also calls on the Council and the Member States to take rapid measures to guarantee decent pensions for all, which must not in any circumstances lie below the poverty level. Reconciliation policies : Parliament emphasises that in order to avoid a disproportionate burden on women because of an increased demand for care in an ageing society, labour and care should be rendered compatible for both men and women in all Member States and equally distributed between women and men. It encourages the Member States to enter into permanent long-term commitments to the family, including entitlement to additional allowances for parents, especially additional measures to support single mothers, and tax or social relief for crèches and for voluntary, cooperative and charitable organisations. The resolution calls on the Member States to ensure accessible, affordable, flexible and high-quality services, and in particular access to childcare facilities, aiming to ensure conditions for the provision of 50 % of necessary care for children aged up to three years and 100 % of care for three-to-six-year-olds, as well as improved access to care for other dependents and adequate leave arrangements for both mothers and fathers. Economic and growth policies : Members take the view that tapping into new markets in the ‘silver economy’ offers a major opportunity for improving competitiveness and innovative potential and for boosting growth and employment and for increasing volunteering. They consider that one means of tackling the digital divide – a phenomenon that particularly affects women, especially older women, and leads to professional and social exclusion – would be for schools to organise experimental IT literacy initiatives. They believe that the agreement of strong new antidiscrimination legislation in the access to goods and services will offer a major opportunity for economic growth and employment, as the barriers faced by older people to certain services and goods are dismantled. They call for an end to any unreasonable or unfair blanket bans on goods and services based on age alone, which many older people face when trying to purchase insurance, holidays or car rentals, for example. Member States are called upon to put in place framework conditions, and particularly to take innovative and barrier-free measures, that reflect differing regional conditions in this regard. Pension and budgetary policies : Members consider that an ageing population coupled with a declining birth-rate within Europe represents a fundamental demographic change which will require reform of the welfare and fiscal systems of Europe, including pension systems, providing good care for older generations whilst avoiding the accumulation of a debt burden for younger generations. They encourage reform of the stability and growth pact, so that Member States can fulfil their obligation to make their pension systems more sustainable. Noting that numerous issues relating to demographic change in society fall exclusively within the competence of the Member States, the resolution recognises the need for each Member State to take action to ensure its public finances are sustainable and can adequately manage demographic change. The resolution encourages Member States to support all families within their tax and benefits systems and to promote the provision of childcare services to families with small children. It also encourages Member States to remove all disincentives, particularly in relation to tax and pensions, for older people to continue working beyond retirement age. Migration policies : Members consider that migration combined with successful integration, including economic integration, can be one of the ways of coping with demographic change. They are convinced that open and sincere debate is essential in order to discuss different immigration policies. They consider that a sense of identification in accordance with democratic traditions and fundamental constitutional values, participation based on equal opportunities and responsibility are prerequisites for successful integration, that integration can work only where immigrants are prepared to adapt and locals are receptive, and that solidarity between generations is complemented by solidarity between cultures, which implies the removal of prejudices about different cultures. Health and Care policies : the resolution calls attention to the severe regional imbalances apparent in terms of demographic change, and the fact that it sets in train processes of migration away from rural and peripheral regions, with the result that structural transformations in social and health care must be envisaged, funding must be made available for them, and an intensive exchange of best practices and those which support developments and services based on modern information and communications technologies must be undertaken. Recognising what has been achieved by the Member States in the field of care for older people, Members call however on them to bring greater attention than hitherto to bear on the enforcement of, and compliance with, quality criteria for service provision. They call, through the open method of communication, for an exchange of information and best practice between Member States on the provision of long-term care for older people and, in particular, measures to safeguard older people in the community and in care homes and to tackle abuse of the elderly. Lastly, Parliament takes the view that an EU-wide code of conduct for the provision of long-term care, outlining minimum guidelines and service outcomes, needs to be drawn up and to be adopted by Parliament and the Council.
  • date: 2010-11-11T00:00:00 type: End of procedure in Parliament body: EP
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  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/social/ title: Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion commissioner: ANDOR László
procedure/Modified legal basis
Old
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 150
New
Rules of Procedure EP 150
procedure/dossier_of_the_committee
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EMPL/7/02202
New
  • EMPL/7/02202
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure EP 052
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 052
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Old
  • 4.10.14 Demography
New
4.10.14
Demography
activities
  • date: 2010-02-11T00:00:00 body: EP type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: ECON date: 2009-11-24T00:00:00 committee_full: Economic and Monetary Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: ECR name: FOX Ashley body: EP responsible: True committee: EMPL date: 2009-10-22T00:00:00 committee_full: Employment and Social Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: PPE name: MANN Thomas body: EP responsible: False committee: FEMM date: 2009-11-30T00:00:00 committee_full: Women's Rights and Gender Equality rapporteur: group: PPE name: BAUER Edit
  • date: 2010-09-30T00:00:00 body: EP committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: ECON date: 2009-11-24T00:00:00 committee_full: Economic and Monetary Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: ECR name: FOX Ashley body: EP responsible: True committee: EMPL date: 2009-10-22T00:00:00 committee_full: Employment and Social Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: PPE name: MANN Thomas body: EP responsible: False committee: FEMM date: 2009-11-30T00:00:00 committee_full: Women's Rights and Gender Equality rapporteur: group: PPE name: BAUER Edit type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
  • date: 2010-10-06T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2010-268&language=EN type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading title: A7-0268/2010 body: EP type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • date: 2010-11-10T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20101110&type=CRE type: Debate in Parliament title: Debate in Parliament body: EP type: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2010-11-11T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=18878&l=en type: Results of vote in Parliament title: Results of vote in Parliament url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2010-400 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading title: T7-0400/2010 body: EP type: Results of vote in Parliament
committees
  • body: EP responsible: False committee: ECON date: 2009-11-24T00:00:00 committee_full: Economic and Monetary Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: ECR name: FOX Ashley
  • body: EP responsible: True committee: EMPL date: 2009-10-22T00:00:00 committee_full: Employment and Social Affairs (Associated committee) rapporteur: group: PPE name: MANN Thomas
  • body: EP responsible: False committee: FEMM date: 2009-11-30T00:00:00 committee_full: Women's Rights and Gender Equality rapporteur: group: PPE name: BAUER Edit
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/social/ title: Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion commissioner: ANDOR László
procedure
dossier_of_the_committee
EMPL/7/02202
reference
2010/2027(INI)
title
Demographic challenge and solidarity between generations
legal_basis
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 052
stage_reached
Procedure completed
subtype
Initiative
Modified legal basis
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 150
type
INI - Own-initiative procedure
subject
4.10.14 Demography